Performance reviews are still the central element of performance management in many organizations. Employees expect a yearly or quarterly review of what they’ve accomplished, what they need to improve, and the actions they’re expected to take. But the rest of the year? They get little to no support.
That’s where a performance coaching culture comes in.
Instead of only giving support to struggling employees, a performance coaching culture turns managers into coaches and allies for all employees. The best part? By making this a cultural commitment, you can integrate performance coaching into existing workflows rather than just adding more work onto everyone’s plate—especially when you use the right technology.
Key takeaways:
Performance coaching supports employees in optimizing their contributions to your organization. It’s not just about making them ideal workers; it’s about challenging them to identify their weaknesses, grow, and become better collaborators. While a performance coaching is usually “delivered” to employees through 1-on-1 meetings and performance reviews, it’s different from managing or evaluating employees.
Management is aimed at making employees more productive team members, and evaluation measures their progress towards that goal. Performance coaching is about helping them figure out what matters to them, how they can grow into their best selves, and supporting them in that growth.
Some of the key elements of performance coaching in the workplace include:
Performance coaching builds a one-to-one relationship between employees and their managers so they feel supported as they grow. Not only that, but it aligns managers with support from HR and buy-in from leadership. This doesn’t just steadily improve their performance over time; it keeps employees engaged and allows you to retain them.
Performance coaching isn’t something that happens on a manager-per-manager basis. It has to be implemented organization-wide, meaning it needs to become part of your company culture. Like any other aspect of culture, it starts with leadership.
Leaders need to be aligned on purpose, methods, and expectations. If some leaders see performance coaching exclusively as a means to increase the number of top performers while others see it as a more holistic pursuit, then the coaching experience will be lopsided throughout different teams.
Top performers in some departments might get significant coaching while other departments might de-prioritize their growth to give more support to low performers. Neither approach is necessarily wrong, but they’re misaligned and will struggle to achieve any desirable outcomes.
Similarly, managers, leaders, and HR need to align on their various roles in performance coaching:
While alignment and shared purpose are vital for successful performance coaching, it’s important to build (or reinforce) trust and psychological safety into your company culture, as well. Without these elements in place, it’ll be difficult to get employees to engage fully in the process.
Performance coaching is a practice that requires a skillful approach, and since managers are the front line, they need to master these skills. Skills like:
Different managers have different skills, but just like employees need to grow to find their best selves, managers need to shore up their weaknesses so they can better support a performance coaching culture. That might involve training sessions for managers, sharing support between teams, or providing consistent templates and resources to all managers.
When performance coaching creates extra work, everyone is less likely to engage with it. Employees who might already feel overworked shouldn’t have to feel tension between doing their day-to-day work and taking on additional tasks to follow their performance plan.
Similarly, managers who already have a full plate will struggle to implement the support their employees need. That’s why performance coaching should be integrated into existing work rather than added onto an already full workday. Here’s how:
Integrating performance coaching initiatives into regular work can be challenging without the right tools. That’s where dedicated performance management tools like 15Five Perform come in. As a single platform centralizing performance management and coaching, it naturally integrates your coaching efforts into the work you’re already doing.
Curious to see how it works? Check it out here.
While implementing performance coaching initiatives and aligning leadership on their expectations for them will already make a massive difference, most organizations are missing a crucial piece. Data.
Data-driven HR functions contribute to the organization’s overall success, and nowhere is that more true than in performance coaching. If you’re not starting from a data-driven foundation, your initial performance coaching initiatives might be based exclusively on assumptions and best practices.
Not a bad place to start, but not where you want to stay, either.
Collecting data as you implement performance coaching initiatives will help you determine their impact, adjust your approach, and get buy-in from stakeholders for any future initiatives.
Examples of data you can collect to improve performance coaching include:
When managers are directly (and regularly) involved in performance coaching, they can flag potential performance issues before they become broader trends. That’s why this data is so essential.
Performance coaching strategies need to be scalable. An individual manager with a team of three people might be able to dedicate half their day—or more—to coaching their employees, but five managers with 20 team members each might struggle to apply this strategy consistently.
HR teams need to find the right balance between making their strategy comprehensive and ensuring it scales. This involves direct enablement for managers, getting regular feedback from everyone in the org chart, and addressing potential problems before they balloon with scale.
Standardizing performance coaching isn’t about trying to fit every employee into the same plan, and some customization will always be required. But establishing a similar foundation across teams is essential for building a strategy that scales.
Performance coaching has a direct impact on metrics that HR, leaders, and managers care about. Metrics like employee engagement, regrettable turnover, and even revenue per employee can all show the effects of performance coaching throughout the organization. That’s because performance coaching ties directly to:
Continuously measuring these metrics—and others—gives you a broader view of performance trends and validates your approach to coaching.
Establishing a performance coaching culture is a significant undertaking, well worth the investment, but fraught with challenges. As you work to align leaders, HR, and managers on expectations, watch out for these potential issues:
Performance coaching isn’t done with a single initiative or even a few training sessions. It’s a system that allows employees to find purpose in their work, close skill gaps, and contribute to the organization’s broader mission.
It’s built on a foundation of company culture and leadership buy-in, requires manager readiness and enablement, should integrate seamlessly into regular day-to-day work, and should be measured through metrics like employee engagement and retention.
Coaching doesn’t just make employees feel better about their work; it has a direct impact on the organization’s bottom line.
Ready to integrate performance coaching in your organization? Check out what 15Five Performcan do.