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The Individual Performance Plan Content

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The individual performance plan contains the details of the work the person will be doing over the next 12 months.

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. Remember that the performance management process for individual staff forms part of the total performance management process (strategic, departmental, individual).

The performance agreement contains the following components:

A statement of performance results. Also called Key Result/Performance Areas (KRA's or KPA’s). 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 key to completing 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.

Formulate Specific, Measurable, and Achievable Objectives for Each Individual

Formulate performance objectives that will lead to the achievement of the agreed KRA's. For each KRA you could potentially have between 3 and 8 performance objectives. Remember to set SMART objectives!

S = Specific

What is the exact scope of the objective?

What is included and what is not?

What might be thought to be included but is being done by someone else?

What must be done with the outputs?

M = Measurable

What measures will be used to know that the objective has truly been reached?

When and how often will the process be measured?

What measurement tools can be used to determine success?

What format must the output take?

A = Achievable

Is the objective feasible?

If not feasible, are we willing to change to make it feasible?

R = Realistic

Is the task realistic, given the level and skills of the individual?

Have you considered all variables when setting timelines?

T = Time-specific

Have you set a timeline for all objectives that all involved agreed with?

Ensure that All the Critical Areas of Performance are covered by the Identified Goals and Objectives

You should:

Make sure that you have covered all areas of responsibility mentioned in the staff member’s job description.

Make sure that all day-to-day responsibilities, which are not indicated on the job description, are also covered. You can ask the staff member to run you through a typical week for you to get a good idea of all the job responsibilities and functions.

Ensure that all the departmental goals and objectives are covered.

Preparing for Conducting a Performance Planning Discussion

The following steps must be taken before the discussion:

Review any existing individual performance agreement. Note what has and what has not been achieved.

Set aside at least one uninterrupted hour for the performance planning and agreement meeting.

Review the relevant business/department/team plan so that you are familiar with the key outputs required by the business relevant to the work you do.

Consider any issues that might arise during the meeting so that you will be fully prepared for any event.

Think about how you will create a positive atmosphere in the meeting (by not being defensive, demonstrating that you have some good ideas, listening to the other person carefully, asking for clarification when necessary, and so on).

The following steps should be taken during the discussion:

When the meeting starts, make sure that both you and the staff member have all the materials you need, including previous performance agreements, business/department/team plan and preparatory notes.

The manager/supervisor must play a lead role in facilitating this meeting but should not dominate the discussion. Always ask the staff member for his/her views rather than giving a solution before he/she had an opportunity to participate in the discussion. The manager and staff member should each be speaking for approximately 50% of the time.

The manager/supervisor should set the performance context for the staff member. Discuss the priorities of the business and the department or team to which the staff member belongs.

Stick to facts. Do not let personality differences get in the way of a productive meeting.