Have you found yourself having to deal with an underperforming employee?
As business leaders, we always want to think the best of our staff and depending on our leadership style, it can be difficult to know the best way to deal with poor performance in the workplace.
An employee who is underperforming is someone not meeting the expectations of their employer. It might be a sales executive failing to meet targets, or an employee who is constantly late or missing deadlines. The reality of whether staff are missing the mark is often subjective and set by the employer’s expectations.
The first step to dealing with underperforming staff is to identify the cause of their underperformance. Julie Nicholds, from Loch Associates Group names these nine reasons why employees underperform at work:
If you monitor employee performance long-term, you will know whether their performance has dropped or has been consistently low. If it has dropped and seems out of character, its likely to be due to their circumstances, whether at work or at home.
In any situation, to identify the cause of underperformance, the answer is to communicate!
If you follow those steps, you’ll probably find you identify the reason why they are underperforming, and you can work together to address it.
It’s one thing dealing with underperformance when it happens, but wouldn’t it be better to put things in place to lessen its occurrence and impact? Of course, some circumstances are out of our control so let’s focus on what leaders can control.
Have you been clear enough in your expectations of that employee? Are you expecting too much of them? This is the first place to start before placing blame or harbouring feelings towards an employee before giving them the benefit of the doubt.
Quite often, misgivings with staff underperformance can be because they don’t share the owner’s goals, vision and passion for the business. This lack of understanding can then be misunderstood as underperformance.
In her chapter in Timeless Principles of Exceptional Businesses, Blair Koch claims that ‘a lack of alignment between a business owner and his or her managers and employees can keep a company from its maximum potential. In extreme cases, it may destroy the business if the employees are consistently out of step with the vision and goals established by the owner.’
It is up to you, as the owner, to commit to the alignment process which could be as follows:
Blair goes into even more detail on these steps and give additional, useful suggestions in her chapter. Download ‘Achieving Business Success through Organisational Alignment’ for free.
Effective hiring is a key part of maximising your employee’s potential, and as a result, avoiding underperformance.
Consider these questions when hiring: Does this person fit with my company’s values? Is this the right role for their experience and capabilities?
Or if you have an employee underperforming: Have they outgrown their role? Is it time for a promotion or a change to their role that’s better suited to their skills? Are they overwhelmed with their responsibilities?
Read our chapter on Getting the Right People in the Right Seats for more tips on this area.
Another way to avoid employee underperformance is for you to be available. Whatever issue an employee has, if you set yourself up with an open-door policy, they are more likely to come to you or their direct line before the issue grows into underperformance.
Start by scheduling monthly one-to-ones with everyone on your team. Depending on the size of your business, you should also encourage your management team to do that with their teams too.
If you have done everything you can to help an employee improve, it’s important you take action when it’s time. Keeping staff who are negatively impacting your business is not going to do anyone any favours. In the end, there is only one solution and don’t be afraid to make that decision.
People management is a tricky thing. It's not just underperforming employees, but business leaders need guidance in dealing with difficult employees or recruitment or managing a team with remote and office workers.
At TAB, there are ways we help people management become easier through our business support services. If you want to find out more, https://www.thealternativeboard.co.uk/remote-office-workers-management/do not hesitate to get in touch about TAB membership.