5 Tips for Delivering Constructive Feedback
Giving negative feedback to a team member can be difficult. Here’s how to turn it into a positive experience. And for more information, see my other post on this topic. Good luck!
Giving negative feedback to a team member can be difficult. Here’s how to turn it into a positive experience. And for more information, see my other post on this topic. Good luck!
Organizations with highly effective communication and change management practices are more than twice as likely to significantly outperform their peers. Here are six activities that influence overall change success.
Put together the right team for your change initiative and make sure you have support for top organizational leaders. Here are 10 Principles of Leading Change Management from strategy+business.
People fear change. How can you overcome this? Plan to communicate… a lot. Simple, clear messages can overcome the fear of the unknown. Employees need to know what’s changing and when, why the change is happening (and how it fits into the bigger picture, i.e. the business strategy) and the process to execute the change, including a timeline or milestones. Repeat your key messages often throughout all of your various channels. Clarity, simplicity and consistency are key.
Listening to your stakeholders, and letting them know you’re acting on their feedback, is an important part of building trust. You can include listening into your transformation planning in different ways and at different times throughout the process. Hold focus groups, survey or poll employees to support your need for the change and get suggestions for what’s working or what improvements could be made. Test the new process, program or idea with a group of people before rolling it out. And ask for feedback after the change has been announced and/or after it’s happened. What questions and concerns do your stakeholders have? How are you addressing those concerns?
Remember to include measurable goals in your transformation plan — goals can be monetary savings, actions your stakeholders have to take or a culture shift. Make sure to revisit these goals throughout the transformation.
Think about who needs to know what’s happening and who is indirectly affected by the change. Who should be part of the change team, who needs to support the initiative, who needs to be in the know though they’re not directly involved and which external stakeholders need to know?
Some change initiatives are short and fairly simple, and others are years and years in the making. In either situation, adjust the plan as needed. Stay focused on the outcome. Return to your goals. Repeat your key messages over and over.
For more information on engagement and change programs, email me at kerrigan@on-the-same-page.com.
5 things you can do NOW to engage workers… OTSP CEO Tracy Benson was recently featured on Smallbiz Radio’s podcast and shared tips on how to boost workplace engagement.
Smallbiz America with David Wolf is a weekly podcast featuring up close interviews with Business Owners, CEOs, Authors, Speakers and Thought Leaders. The full podcast series is available for download on iTunes and streaming at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/smallbizamerica
SBA Radio is also in radio syndication coast to coast across the BizTalkRadio Network.
There are so many contexts in which people ask questions in the workplace – from peers in the office or on the manufacturing line working out a problem to a leader assessing and diagnosing a large-scale operational issue. In all of these scenarios, five rules apply. Done well, the process of asking questions can result in collaborative dialogue that allows all parties to feel they have contributed to an important solution.