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Having tough conversations: How to give feedback to employees

• By Rajesh Rai

Life can be complex and so can be conversations. All of us want pleasant experiences. Giving or receiving tough feedback is like a road no one wants to tread. It is hard for managers to share harsh feedback with an employee – they all need support, reassurance and may be protection from a difficult situationIn my experience majority of the managers shy away from having tough conversations with their team members. In fact, I have seen managers running in panic to human resources for assistance. Anyone can make out that they have an inherent subconscious expectation that HR would take it all up forthrightly with the employee.

Almost all the times that I have been approached to carry forward such conversations with an employee, (who may be a low performer or who may not be meeting his goals or may be having interpersonal issues with other team members or may be just a plain slow starter and needs feedback strongly), I have gone back and asked the manager a million questions concerning the whats, whys and hows. I have also received stinking mailers asking me why I was being so enquiring. Well, it isn’t so simple.I have asked managers to prepare in writing, the following before such a meeting:

A much difficult job is to ensure that the mindset of the employee and the manager is ‘right’ when they come in for the meeting. “Right” means that they both are willing to solve the problem at hand and not “accuse” each other, That’s a tough one. As I always maintain, behaviors are very tough to change. The key is how you can maintain confidentiality of the whole situation while extracting data and information key to resolving the problem..

In present days of the economy, tough conversations assume further significance especially when it’s a hard decision to be made concerning letting employees go or giving them feedback on performance improvement. However the background questions remain the same and that preparation is key to the conversation. Performance expectations have changed to becoming tougher. Not only is a manager who cannot share tough feedback into focus, the emphasis is also on the employee who cannot receive it constructively.
In India, a large part of our conversations are emotional. However everything you say need to be logical and, definitive,

We are Hardwired to Jump to Conclusions - “Think not that thy word and thine alone must be right.” - Sophocles, Antigone, 706

I have observed the following very random behavior in situations that make it even more complex:

I can go on with many other similar situationsThere could be many surprises in the off-wing so prepare for them. The bottom-line is to keep your cool and the right attitude.tough conversations are as important as normal conversations, so don’t run away from them – face them, challenge them, resolve them with the right mind-set.