The third step of the Four-Step Coaching Method is Try-out. During this step, you will:
Experienced coaches take different approaches to the try-out step. Some keep it separate from the follow-up, while others prefer employees perform them at the same time. Coaches also have combined the try-out with the presentation and demonstration. You should decide which method will work best for you. That decision may be determined by the task being trained.
Inexperienced coaches often stop the coaching process after they have completed the presentation and demonstration. They assume that because they have “trained”, surely the employees have “learned”. Unfortunately, that is not always the case. During practice, the coach will determine what employees have learned, found any problem areas, and help them increase their skills.
Never leave employees to their own devices during the try-out. Remain alert and involved in the continuing learning process.
A try-out should follow the presentation and demonstration as soon as it is practical. The less time that passes between the presentation/demonstration step and practice, the easier it will be for the employees to perform the task correctly. The employees also will need less review.
To make the practice time beneficial:
Have the Employees Explain the Task: Their explanation will help you determine whether they understand what you have taught. If every employee makes the same mistake, you will want to assess the points at which the presentation and demonstration were not clear. Verbalising the task while they are performing it also reinforces the employees’ understanding. In a sense, they are “programming” their minds to recall the correct procedures. If their explanations are incomplete, correct them, so they are not “programmed” the wrong way.
Ask the Employees to Repeat the Practice to Create Habits: It has been said that “practice makes perfect”. Well, it does, provided it is a perfect practice. Some employees can practice the task correctly the first time, while others will have difficulty. Multiple practices are important because they create habits. The number of times a task is practiced will vary from employee to employee. The coach can move on to another task after the employee consecutively performs the task correctly two or three times.
Watch the employees as they practice and note any areas which need to be clarified or corrected. The goal of practice is to give the employees the opportunity to practice the task in a controlled environment while someone is available to help.
There are four ways to make the observation process easier:
Explain Why you are Observing: Tell the employees you are checking that the presentation and demonstration were enough for them to perform the task.
Look at Individual Steps: Watch the steps in the process to determine which ones are correct and which needs improvement.
Review the Task More than Once: Have the employees perform the task two or three times to verify that they have the techniques and the knowledge needed to work independently.
Evaluate the End-Result: Does the product or performance meet the standard? What areas of the process created problems for the end-result?
Monitoring and review is primarily a means of reinforcing the knowledge that contributions are recognised and valued. It is not an isolated event, but an ongoing process that takes place continuously. As shown, assignments and projects are monitored continually. Monitoring means consistently measuring performance and providing ongoing feedback to coaches or employees on their progress toward reaching their goals.
Click here to view a video on how performance reviews should be done.
Ongoing monitoring provides the coach the opportunity to check how well coaches/employees are meeting predetermined standards and to make changes to unrealistic or problematic standards. By monitoring continually, coaches can identify unacceptable performance at any time during the appraisal period and help address such performance rather than wait until the end of the period when summary rating levels are assigned.
Ways through which performance can be observed include:
It is important that the atmosphere in performance review meeting is positive and that both parties treat each other as equals. Make the other party feel at ease.
Remember that employees are entering the meeting with feelings of uneasiness, fear, trepidation and even hostility.
The coach’s role in this meeting is to ensure that the organisation’s performance requirements will be achieved through the action of the coaches/employees they manage.
The formal performance review has three purposes:
You and the coach/employee need to reach agreement of feedback given and received. Both parties need to accept the current reality and the underlying reasons for that reality, before one can move forward by developing an action plan.
Summarise the main points of feedback. Then, develop an action plan to address all these points. Some actions might have to be taken by the coach and some by the coacher/employee. An action plan is specifically aimed at bringing performance to an acceptable level of standard.
Feedback is the process according to which you receive information from the external environment on both the positive and negative aspects of your performance. Feedback provides an answer to the question "How am I doing?"
Another important aspect of performance and development management is the aspect of giving and receiving feedback. Feedback answers the question: ‘How am I doing?’
Once people agree to achieve certain goals and goals, they need to know how well they are doing.
Constructive feedback on performance and development is important because it encourages and motivates employees to perform at acceptable standards. It helps correct mistakes and solves problems; it builds relationships between people; saves money; and provides direction. People taking part in a performance management process, both coaches and employees and staff members, need to know how to provide constructive feedback as well as how to receive feedback in such a manner that it will have a positive effect on performance. Open and direct criticism provides the opportunity to clear misunderstandings and correct wrong perceptions and behaviour.
Key actions that need to be performed are:
Click here to view a video on how to give feedback.
NOTE: Because coaches/learners check their own performance in this process, they receive much of their feedback directly, using monitoring methods established during the planning phase. As a result, they can act whenever necessary to stay on target towards these objectives.
In addition to data obtained from own monitoring sources, coaches or employees also depend on coaches for information. When they perform effectively or need to improve, you need to tell them and provide specific feedback on what they did well and what they did not do so well. Your feedback is important. It helps determine whether individuals meet goals. For best results, your feedback should be prompt, balanced, and specific.
Provide feedback as soon as possible after the incident occurs. Feedback today on something that happened this morning means much more than feedback tomorrow or the following week. The incident is still fresh in the person’s mind, so feedback will be more meaningful.
Mix positive and constructive comments throughout the discussion where possible. Too much negative feedback might make people defensive and unwilling to communicate. If you recognise satisfactory performance in the beginning and leave the corrective feedback for the end, a person might feel ‘set up’. Disappointment and resentment might then replace any feeling of satisfaction. After giving corrective feedback, end the discussion with a plan for improving performance. Work closely with the staff member on the plan. The more the individual contributes to it, the more committed she will be to carry it out.
A vague comment, like “You could have done a better job on that report”, does not identify a problem. It does not show what was wrong and how to improve. It is not the type of feedback that will help someone achieve his or her goals. Along the same lines, general praise like “You have done a decent job on that report”, also does not specify what the individual did well and should continue doing. Specific feedback explains what the individual did and why it as effective or ineffective.
Positive feedback is more readily and accurately perceived than negative feedback. Further, while positive feedback is always acceptable, the negative variety often meets resistance. Why? The logical answer seems to be that people want to hear good news and block out the bad. Positive feedback fits what most people wish to hear and already believe about them.
Does this mean that you should avoid giving negative feedback? No!
What it means is that you need to be aware of potential resistance and learn to use negative feedback in situations where it is most likely to be accepted.
Research shows that negative feedback is most likely to be accepted when it comes from a credible source or if it is goal in form.
Negative feedback that is supported by hard data – numbers, specific examples and the like – has a good chance of being accepted.
The purpose for this meeting is…
I asked you here to discuss…
I want to spend some time discussing how you…
I have a concern about…
A problem has occurred in…
I saw…
A problem has occurred in…
If this continues then…
In looking at this situation as a customer would, it appears…
I am concerned about…
I do not think it is right that…
That is what I know but what is your view…
Is that the way you see it?
OK, what is your reaction?
Well, how do you know that?
And then what happened?
If you did that, then why did...?