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18 October, 2018 | 3 mins read
The weight of evidence in recent years with regard to traditional performance appraisal and developmental conversation between line managers and direct reports presents a clear picture – not only do they not motivate higher performance, but they often reduce motivation and performance.
To reshape these conversations to make them positive and useful, we can go back to the question: What are they intended to achieve? To which the answer is:
To achieve these outcomes, the process must be jointly owned, so the direct report doesn’t feel it is being done to them. It also needs to balance:
Here is a simple framework – based on global good practice — for getting back to the real purpose of these conversations:
© David Clutterbuck, 2018
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