The individual performance plan is the basis for the performance agreement. The content of this plan is used to construct one component of the performance agreement. Also remember that the performance management process for individual staff forms part of the total performance management process (strategic, department, individual).
The performance agreement contains the following components:
A statement of performance results. Also called Key Result Areas (KRAs). These are the major outcomes the staff member is expected to achieve over a period of 12 months.
Manager’s support. This requires the supervisor to specify how he/she will assist the staff member to achieve the performance results.
Learning and development plan. This specifies how the staff member will develop the skills required to achieve the performance results and to advance their personal career.
Performance evaluation. This includes the rating that represents the extent to which the staff member has achieved their performance results.
Career plan. An explanation of how this year’s performance and development relates to the overall career objectives of the individual.
The process for establishing the performance agreement with staff is as important as the performance agreement itself. If staff feels aggrieved by the process they are unlikely to be motivated to achieve the targets set.
The following steps must be taken before the discussion:
The following steps should be taken during the discussion:
You need a new form for each annual individual performance agreement.
You should complete all the details in the first section.
Refer to the performance evaluation definitions when completing the form.
The key to completing this section of the performance agreement form is for the manager and staff member to agree on the Key Performance Areas and the major goals and objectives the staff member needs to undertake in the following 12 months.
Do not try to capture all the results the staff member must achieve. The idea is to capture the most important ones only. Use the 80/20 principle.
Be specific in the descriptions you use. Each performance result must be measurable. Measurable can include the number of outputs/services expected, the quality of results and timeline targets.
If the role of the staff member is administrative or supportive in nature, they should be viewed as servicing internal customers. The performance results should contain the most important contributions that the person makes in servicing the internal customer.
Copies of the relevant business plan, team plans and staff member’s job description will be useful when completing this section.
Step 1: Start by identifying the Key Result Areas. Please note that these must be outcomes/results based. Group specific tasks together in bigger categories.
Example:
Step 2: The next step is to formulate performance objectives that will lead to the achievement of the agreed KRAs. For each KRA you could potentially have between 3 and 8 performance objectives. Remember to set SMART objectives!
You should: