Keeping Employees Accountable for Results: Quick Tips for Busy Managers

This useful resource gives time-pressed managers the proven, practical information they need to help their people accomplish more.

All managers want to hold their employees accountable for results, but few know how. Moving far beyond the typical annual performance review, Keeping Employees Accountable for Results provides simple ways to build teams by engaging participants in learning about themselves and their team players. 

The book gives busy managers quick, step-by-step advice on:

  • Setting expectations
  • Monitoring progress
  • Giving feedback
  • Following through

Light on theory and heavy on practical application, Keeping Employees Accountable for Results contains checklists, templates, techniques, and other tools to manage performance on an ongoing basis.

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Keeping Employees Accountable for Results: Quick Tips for Busy Managers

This useful resource gives time-pressed managers the proven, practical information they need to help their people accomplish more.

All managers want to hold their employees accountable for results, but few know how. Moving far beyond the typical annual performance review, Keeping Employees Accountable for Results provides simple ways to build teams by engaging participants in learning about themselves and their team players. 

The book gives busy managers quick, step-by-step advice on:

  • Setting expectations
  • Monitoring progress
  • Giving feedback
  • Following through

Light on theory and heavy on practical application, Keeping Employees Accountable for Results contains checklists, templates, techniques, and other tools to manage performance on an ongoing basis.

6.99 In Stock
Keeping Employees Accountable for Results: Quick Tips for Busy Managers

Keeping Employees Accountable for Results: Quick Tips for Busy Managers

by Brian Miller
Keeping Employees Accountable for Results: Quick Tips for Busy Managers

Keeping Employees Accountable for Results: Quick Tips for Busy Managers

by Brian Miller

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Overview

This useful resource gives time-pressed managers the proven, practical information they need to help their people accomplish more.

All managers want to hold their employees accountable for results, but few know how. Moving far beyond the typical annual performance review, Keeping Employees Accountable for Results provides simple ways to build teams by engaging participants in learning about themselves and their team players. 

The book gives busy managers quick, step-by-step advice on:

  • Setting expectations
  • Monitoring progress
  • Giving feedback
  • Following through

Light on theory and heavy on practical application, Keeping Employees Accountable for Results contains checklists, templates, techniques, and other tools to manage performance on an ongoing basis.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814429020
Publisher: AMACOM
Publication date: 01/20/2006
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishing
Format: eBook
Pages: 160
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

BRIAN COLE MILLER is the principal of Working Solutions, Inc., a management training and consulting firm whose clients include Nationwide Insurance, Kellogg's, and the Ohio State University. He is the author of Keeping Employees Accountable for Results and other popular books.

Read an Excerpt

Keeping Employees Accountable for Results


By Brian Cole Miller

AMACOM BOOKS

Copyright © 2006 Brian Cole Miller
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-8144-7320-2


Introduction

The SIMPLE Approach to Accountability

This book is written for the busy manager who wants to maximize employee and team productivity through accountability.

The principles in the book are not exclusively for the busy manager, however. Anyone can use them with a boss, peers, vendors, consultants, and business partners. You can even apply them outside the job. Use them to hold contractors, lawyers, designers, community leaders, mechanics, your teenagers, and just about anyone else in your life accountable.

While this book includes a process, several pieces can be used separately. For example, providing feedback is useful in many other day-to-day activities. Praise your son's success in school, recognize your niece's efforts in her lacrosse game, or complain to a restaurant manager about poor service.

What You Can Expect from This Book

Heavy on application, light on theory, this book focuses on how-tos. It includes steps, tips, and examples throughout. You'll learn what to do, when to do it, and how to do it. What you won't find is a lot of theory. I've included just enough to validate the how-tos but not enough to make you an expert on the subject. Busy managers don't have time for that. "Just give me what I need to get thejob done!" is what I hear most from my clients, whether large or small, for-profit or not-for-profit.

In each chapter here's what you'll see (and not see):

Lots of examples. Wherever possible I've shown one or more examples of the particular step or point. Most of them are from real companies or real-life experiences.

Some theory, but not a lot. I've included just enough to help the steps make sense, and to justify their order.

Not every possibility is covered. If it were, this book would be several volumes long. I've covered the most common circumstances. If yours are different, either ask someone for help (you can call me at Working Solutions) or get one of those long, drawn-out books.

An easy-to-read format. It highlights the basics so that you can easily skim past stuff you already know.

Details when you need them. You can delve deeper when you want more specifics and go right back to a higher level when you've had enough.

A conversational style. It's simple and makes for a quick read.

The SIMPLE Approach to Accountability

Accountability is a process that consists of six principles. Each principle builds on the previous one.

S - Set Expectations. Your employees need to know what is expected of them before you can hold them accountable for anything. You can't assume they know what is supposed to be done, when, or to what quality level. The more clearly you set expectations and goals up front, the less time you will waste later clarifying-or worse, arguing-about what was really expected.

I - Invite Commitment. Just because your employees know what to do doesn't mean they will do it. After they understand what the goals and expectations are, they need to commit to achieving them. They are more likely to do this when they buy in to two things: how the goals will benefit them personally, and how the goals will help move the organization forward. When this connection is made, they will commit to the goals. They will welcome your holding them accountable for their results.

M - Measure Results. You need information to hold your employees accountable. You will measure their performance so that you can gauge whether they've met the goals and expectations that they committed to. Goals aren't measurable unless they are quantifiable, and all goals can be made quantifiable. Measure the results and compare them to your employees' goals to find the gaps that require further attention.

P - Provide Feedback. Share the information you've gathered with your employees. Feedback doesn't solve problems by itself. It opens the door for problem-solving discussions and follow-up actions. Your employees cannot do a good job without feedback, and they certainly can't improve without it. Most of the time, giving feedback is all it takes. Setting expectations followed by quality feedback is the backbone of holding someone accountable for results.

L - Link to Consequences. Sometimes your employees will need a little more help to live up to their commitments. When they struggle to reach their goals, you can help them by administering appropriate consequences. Don't confuse consequences with punishments, though. Punishments are inflicted on employees to make them pay for their shortcomings. They do not contribute to a solution. Consequences, however, will guide and focus employees' behavior and encourage them to take their commitments more seriously.

E - Evaluate Effectiveness. After you have worked with the principles of accountability for a while, you need to evaluate how your efforts have paid off. Determine if you were successful at holding your employees accountable to reach the goals that were set. And in the spirit of continuous improvement, review how you handled the process. Find ways to be more effective at applying the principles of accountability. Hold yourself accountable for holding others accountable!

Each chapter covers one principle of SIMPLE. Each principle is divided into several how-to steps. Each step is presented in the same easy-to-read (and even easier-to-skim) format:

THE STEP describes what the step is in one sentence.

THE REASONS section explains why the step is important.

THE BASICS section covers the highlights of how to do the step or the essentials to keep in mind while doing it.

THE DETAILS section delivers all the background information about the step, substeps, examples, variations of the step, and things to be cautious about.

At the end of each chapter is a CHECKLIST that will give you the highlights of what is covered in that chapter. Use this to make sure you understand all the main points before moving on.

How to Use This Book

This book is organized so that you can readily get as much or as little information as you want. You can skim at a high level without missing the essentials. Just read the Steps, Reasons, and Basics in each chapter. When something grabs your attention, it is easy to dive deep into the Details right there.

Examples are spread throughout the book. They are displayed in a way that makes it easy to pick them out quickly. Generally, they illustrate the point being made in the text preceding them.

There is a long example at the end of Chapter 2. It shows the conclusion of all the work done in chapters 1 and 2. The other long example is at the end of Chapter 5. This one demonstrates how several steps in chapters 4 and 5 might be used together in a real-life situation.

This book is written as a process, but several pieces of that process can stand alone. For example, you can apply the principles of SMART goals to business planning, project management, employee development planning, personal goal setting, succession planning, and more.

This book will not help you much with your superstars. If you want to manage your superstars better, get a book about rewards and recognition. That said, is this book all about problem employees? Not really. Sure, you will learn how to deal with those problem employees. But more important, this book is about helping you set your employees up for success so that none of them ever becomes a problem employee!

This book outlines an ideal process that may not always jibe with the real world you live in. I recognize this and realize that you may not be able to follow every step presented here. I considered trying to anticipate every possible contingency and addressing it. Rather, I chose to trust that you wouldn't have the title "manager" if you didn't already know how to adapt or go with something that was less than a perfect fit.

Use the steps as a model or a pattern to follow when they make sense for you. Adjust your approach when they don't pertain. I have confidence that you, Busy Manager, can take what is relevant and use that to become an even better manager.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Keeping Employees Accountable for Results by Brian Cole Miller Copyright © 2006 by Brian Cole Miller. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction: The SIMPLE Approach to Accountability1
Chapter 1Set Expectations7
Step 1Determine what your organization wants to accomplish7
Step 2Determine what part of your organization's success is your team's responsibility13
Step 3Determine what part of your team's results you will hold each individual accountable for14
Step 4Determine who should write your employees' goals16
Step 5Use SMART to define each employee's responsibilities with goals that are Specific19
Step 6Use SMART to define each employee's responsibilities with goals that are Measurable22
Step 7Use SMART to define each employee's responsibilities with goals that are Action-oriented26
Step 8Use SMART to define each employee's responsibilities with goals that are Realistic29
Step 9Use SMART to define each employee's responsibilities with goals that are Time-bound32
Checklist: Set Expectations35
Chapter 2Invite Commitment37
Step 1Be prepared to explain to your employees why their goals exist37
Step 2Be prepared to explain to your employees what is in it for them if they reach their goals successfully39
Step 3Get ready for your discussion about goals with your employees46
Step 4Present or discuss the goals with your employees49
Step 5Seek buy-in or commitment to the goals52
Step 6Document their agreement to meet their goals in a Performance Plan57
Example: Performance Plan59
Checklist: Invite Commitment63
Chapter 3Measure Results65
Step 1Make sure the measurement tools you use are efficient65
Step 2Make sure the measurement tools you use are fair67
Step 3Make sure the measurement tools you use are simple69
Step 4Use and share the data as soon as it is available71
Step 5Implement the measurement tools and gather the data72
Step 6Compare the actual results you measured to the goals74
Step 7Identify the organization's gain or loss due to your employees' actions75
Checklist: Measure Results77
Chapter 4Provide Feedback79
Step 1Motivate yourself to offer feedback79
Step 2Determine when to deliver your feedback82
Step 3Set the stage for a positive interaction83
Step 4Be specific about what you observed84
Step 5Focus on the behavior or action, not the person or attitude89
Step 6Never use the word but92
Step 7Explain the impact on the organization94
Step 8Understand your employees' perspectives96
Step 9Offer a suggestion, if appropriate98
Checklist: Provide Feedback104
Chapter 5Link to Consequences107
Step 1Determine what consequence(s) should apply107
Step 2Remind your employee of his prior commitment109
Step 3Spell out what action you will take and why111
Step 4Own the action you are taking114
Step 5Agree on a specific action plan116
Step 6Set a follow-up date and stick to it119
Step 7Offer your support121
Step 8Document the discussion123
Example: Link to Consequences Discussion125
Example: Link to Consequences Documentation128
Checklist: Link to Consequences129
Chapter 6Evaluate Effectiveness131
Step 1Hold yourself accountable for what you accomplished131
Step 2Hold yourself accountable for how you accomplished it132
Index137
About the Author145
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