The pre-appraisal checklist and preparing for the appraisal
- Be sure your supervisor notifies you of the date, and that you have enough time to prepare. A conference room is a good choice for privacy and no interruptions. Be sure your supervisor schedules enough time for discussion [1 - 1-1/2 hours].
-
Gather:
- the job description and performance standards*
- goals set from the last appraisal
- your own documentation notes, status reports, or self-assessment
- If you have been asked to do a self-appraisal, be sure to ask how this will be incorporated in the appraisal meeting and be sure you have been given enough time beforehand to fill out the appraisal.
-
Before preparing your self-assessment documentation, take a moment to:
- list your main areas of responsibility
- areas you have done well
- areas you need to improve in
- what you need from your supervisor to do a better job
-
Remember to:
- Be comprehensive, but concise and specific. ["I believe flexibility is one of my performance strengths. This is demonstrated in the way I handled the constantly changing priorities during Fiscal Close in June."]
- Be as objective, honest, and realistic as possible. Employees have a tendency to rate themselves consistently lower than their supervisors rate them.
- Compare your performance to the expectations, standards, and goals that were set.
Writing it down and putting it all together
- What are your major accomplishments?
- What could you have done better?
- Do you understand what is expected of you? Are performance standards and work rules clear?
- What training or professional development do you need?
- Would you like to see your responsibilities change? How? Why?
- What career goals do you have? What do you need to attain those goals?
- How are relationships going with your co-workers? What could they do to help you perform your job better?
- What could your supervisor do to help you perform your job better?
*Standards are SMART: Specific; Measurable; Attainable; Relevant; Timely. Do you have Performance Standards for your job? If not, ask your supervisor about them.
