What Goes Around*
See your Managers' Strengths from
Every AngleA senior manager
announces his decision to move to a competitor
and the senior management team convenes a
crisis-management meeting to figure how the
organization will survive. Meanwhile, for the
rest of the team, it's party time! The champagne
is flowing; everyone's wearing funny hats,
blowing noisemakers, and toasting their good
fortune. The topic du jour is "With that clown
gone, maybe now we can get on with business."
What happened? How can someone so valued by
senior management work so badly with the troops
on the ground? The reality is most senior
managers have no awareness of how they or their
fellow managers perceive them throughout their
organizations, even at a time when so much is
spoken about achievement of corporate goals
through team-based efforts. No wonder that more
than 30 percent of all people changing jobs are
doing so to get away from their bosses. They're
not leaving their jobs—they're leaving their
managers!
This sort of disaster can happen only in an
environment where the performance of management
is appraised using traditional boss-down
appraisals, with performance of managers
assessed only by their direct bosses. This
traditional approach means that the views of
those who most directly experience the
effectiveness (or otherwise) of a manager's
performance—peers and direct reports—are never
tapped. If your success depends to any extent
upon your team, that's just not acceptable any
more.
Multi-Rater
Feedback
Modern business has rendered the traditional
boss-down appraisal extinct, and a more
appropriate approach to assessing management
competencies and performance has emerged. That
new approach is multi-rater feedback, and
Profiles Checkpoint is an excellent example of
this model.
Every year, more than 250,000 managers
worldwide use the Profiles Checkpoint
Multi-Rater Feedback System, a system that
provides managers and leaders with an
opportunity to receive an evaluation of their
job performance from the people around
them—their boss, their peers (fellow managers),
and their direct reports (the people whose work
they supervise). From this feedback, managers
can compare the opinions of others with their
own perceptions, positively identify their
strengths, and pinpoint the areas of their job
performance that need improvement.
The Profiles Checkpoint process is concerned
with a manager's job performance in eight
universal leadership and management competencies
and 18 skill sets:
Communication
• Listens to others
• Processes information
• Communicates effectively
Adaptability
• Adjusts to circumstances
• Thinks creatively
Task Management
• Works efficiently
• Works competently
Development of Others
• Cultivates individual talents
• Motivates successfully
Leadership
• Instills trust
• Provides direction
• Delegates responsibility
Relationships
• Builds personal relationships
• Facilitates team success
Production
• Takes action
• Achieves results
Personal Development
• Displays commitment
• Seeks improvement
How Does it
Work?
Each participant completes an evaluation – a
process that takes about 15 minutes.
Participants are guaranteed anonymity (except
for the boss) and urged to be honest and
objective in their responses. Participants
complete their feedback via the Internet, or on
paper if desired, and results from all
participants are compiled in a report that is
returned to the manager.
Checkpoint reports have colorful graphs and
useful charts, as well as narrative descriptions
of the results, to help the manager read,
understand and effectively use the data for
self-development. The report has a special
personal-growth section that coaches the manager
and helps improve performance in development
areas.
The Checkpoint report also encourages
managers to link directly into an online system
called Checkpoint SkillBuilder, which takes them
through the step-by-step process of developing a
comprehensive and personalized development plan.
You can read more about the Checkpoint system on
the Web at www.profilesinternational.com
Round and
Round…
The upshot is a more detailed and objective
assessment of a manager's strengths, and of any
areas where additional development might be
required. This assessment then forms the basis
of a development plan between managers and their
bosses—whereas the managers are fully aware of
the dynamics of their relationships with the
people around them, they are also effectively
locked into the organization by the commitment
of the organization to their ongoing skill
development.
After a period of six or 12 months, the
process is run again; the effectiveness of the
development plan is assessed; and new
development goals are set for the following
period.
Multi-Rater
Feedback vs. Boss-Down Appraisals
There are several reasons managers at all levels
are eagerly embracing this approach to
performance appraisal.
Equitable
For the manager being appraised, multi-rater
appraisals differ from boss-down appraisals in
the same way that judge and jury courts differ
from "hanging-judge" courts. Managers benefit
from a wide variety of feedback upon their
actual job performance, and, to be deemed
top-performing managers, are no longer solely
dependent upon the extent to which they have
developed a good rapport with their direct boss.
Proven Effectiveness
For the appraising boss, a positive change is
more likely when an appraisal draws upon
multiple sources trusted by the manager.
Multi-rater appraisals are more effective than
boss-down appraisals in driving a manager to
make necessary behavioral changes or to improve
management skills. If your boss says you need
some improvement in some particular area, you
may think, "What would she know?" or explain it
away as a personality thing. If, however, 11
different people of your choosing, people with
whom you work closely and whose views you trust
and value, send you the same message, you really
have to listen.
Team Motivation
Multi-rater feedback systems also have a
positive team-building effect. Research has
proven the motivating value of the exercise for
those involved as reviewers. Your people are
sent a clear message that their opinions are
valued, and they can help effect positive change
in the management where required. Traditional
reviews have given way to this much more
effective tool for management development, as
Fortune 500 organizations are mandating their
use.
Used regularly as an integral part of a
strategic development plan, 360-degree
appraisals can lead to more consistent
management development, better alignment of
corporate goals with personal-development
objectives, more open communication, and better
team balance. |