Employment Review Tips for Your Medical Practice or Busienss

Business Owners | Employment Review Tips for Your Medical Practice or Busienss

EMPLOYEE LAWSUIT LIABILITYA new year is a logical time to a handle a variety of employment related issues. Employee reviews are a key part of the process that will help you manage liabilities and encourage continued success and performance.

We’ve covered a variety of employment related issues ranging from the basic steps all business and medical practice owners and managers must take  to prevent employee lawsuits to why you need professionally drafted employment manuals and how to safely fire an employee when required.  The best managers minimize conflict by being proactive, setting clear goals for both the organization and the employees and communicating both praise and constrictive criticism in a timely, consistent and firm way.

 

Understand why this is so important

 

  • Reviews identify good performance you want to encourage and continue. This is good for your business and your employees.
  • They set the stage for a variety of issues including compensation and advancement and allow you to document why one person may have been given a raise or promotion when another wasn’t.
  • It helps document any negative behavioral or performance issues that may require corrective action up to and including dismissal; an important part of your employment related risk management in the age of employee lawsuits.

 

Get the right person on the job, hint; it may not be you.

 

We’ve seen certain behavioral patterns in businesses of all types that consistently lead to trouble; one of those is the “nice guy boss” or NGB. I mention this here because the way in which employee reviews are conducted and by who plays a major part in how effective they are in protecting both your practice and the people who make it successful.  The problem with the NGB is that he wants to be liked, wants to be everyone’s friend and avoids conflict and tough conversations, often all that’s required to help someone understand what you need from them and their position.  There are many sources of authority on this issue. I found a really simple and well written one that I’ve shared with clients for years and that addresses the psychology of leadership required to do this right, something even the best written forms and checklists can’t communicate.

 

Beyond the forms, what should effective reviews include?

 

  1. They are specific and limited in scope. You can’t cover everything, so make sure you are staring with an organized and consistent process that identifies the core areas of concern you feel are most important, issues related to the employee’s specific job, and any issues, good or bad that are specific to the employees performance and behavior.
  2. They provide both positive reinforcement in their good areas and specific instructions and goals in areas that need improvement or even just changes and communicate a specific timeframe in which the changes need to be made.
  3. They are private and professional; doing this in the break room is a bad idea. This is very important for all parties and should be treated with respect. This means the employees are provided notice and informed of the evaluations and that they start on time as scheduled.
  4. They are a dialogue. Allowing employees to provide you with feedback is as important to good managers as giving to others. It may help identify issues, allow you to update or improve procedures that are costing you money or efficiency and head off liabilities if you listen and provide an opportunity to be heard. In some cases this is done by providing employees a pre-evaluation form where they can list any comments or areas of concern, in other cases it may be through a series of questions the evaluator walks the employee through. Either way, document it and their responses.

This article originally appeared at www.PhysiciansPractice.com where Ike Devji is a regular contributor with over 150 bylines.

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