Whether you're documenting behavior issues or performance problems, the documentation must be written during or immediately following your meeting with the employee. This will ensure that all the details of your conversations are recorded accurately for full transparency.
It's also important that your documents appear neat, professional, and well-organized. You never know when the documents will be read (or by who), so professional and organized documentation will reflect well on your company in the future.
Every time you document employee performance or behavioral issues, be sure to stick to these 5 steps.
Hopefully following your 1-on-1 meeting, the employee will improve their behavior on their own. However, this does not always happen. The responsibility may fall to you to proactively correct your employees' behaviors in a handful of ways (ERC).
One way to correct behavioral issues is to model the behaviors that you want to see in your staff. Employees will generally follow the example that's set by management, so do your best to lead by example.
When you see employees behaving how you want, reinforce that behavior with a reward. This could be as simple as a compliment or even a gift card to a local restaurant.
Make sure you're also responding to your employees' behaviors consistently. If you only ever discipline employees and never reward them, they may not feel motivated to achieve the standards you want.
If you want to correct employee behavioral problems before they happen, our HR specialists at CourtSide® can help with that.
With our HR Systems Buildout services, we can develop custom HR processes and best practices for your organization. We'll also create custom performance and behavior documents to help you track and improve employee issues.
Contact CourtSide® Consulting today to learn how to document employee behavior issues correctly and improve them consistently.