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8 questions that need to be on every manager evaluation form



No one has a more immediate impact on employee engagement, productivity, and workplace satisfaction than direct managers of staff. Yet, most performance evaluation models are top-down—employees receive feedback from the people they report to, but managers rarely receive feedback from the people they manage. In fact, many companies don’t utilize manager evaluation forms at all.

Good employees leave bad managers. And if companies don’t gather feedback on manager performance, they won’t know which managers may be unintentionally poisoning company culture—and contributing to increased turnover.

According to the Society for Human Resource Management, 40% of employees might look for a new job at a new company in the next year. 

Improving your manager evaluation process—and addressing any problems you uncover—can decrease employee turnover.

The Predictive Index® conducted a study of 5,103 people to find out what traits separate good and bad managers, and further, what makes great managers truly great.

Our findings illustrate the importance of effective manager evaluation forms, in both compiling actionable feedback from staff and in fine-tuning manager behaviors going forward.

We compiled eight questions you should include in manager evaluation forms. Here they are:

1. Research indicates “great” managers listen well, motivate others, and consistently make good decisions. Do you see these traits in your manager?

We like using this question because it states upfront what “great” actually means as it pertains to the question.

One common issue with evaluations that use open-ended questions and vague adjectives like “good” or “effective” is that they are highly subjective. Certain employees may not understand how to distinguish “strong” from “excellent” management performance if they’ve never experienced either. Thus you’ll receive skewed or unhelpful results.

manager evaluation form on a computer

As Dr. Greg Barnett, Vice President of Science at The Predictive Index, noted in our study, “If you’ve never driven a Lamborghini (or Tesla) you may be satisfied with your car. But you’ve never really seen what greatness looks like.”

2. Research indicates “great” managers are passionate about their work and compassionate toward others. Do you see these traits in your manager?

In a similar vein, “great” is benchmarked clearly by “passion” and “compassion.” This makes it easier for respondents to more definitively answer yes or no to what may be an otherwise conceptual question.

And the answers to this question can be particularly emblematic of your management performance and your organization as a whole. Seventy-five percent of respondents to our study stated a great manager is “passionate about his or his job,” and 72% said great managers should “care about [them] personally.”

75 percent of great managers are passionate about their job

Without these defining qualities—which may not show up in conventional KPIs like delivery, sales growth, or customer retention—you may be missing out on more human-level metrics.

3. What would you recommend your manager keep doing?

In addition to questions that employees can answer on a five-point scale, Google concludes its manager evaluation forms with two open-ended questions that encourage more blunt, verbatim responses that can be shared with managers.

This is the first of those questions which you, too, can use.

4. What would you recommend your manager change about his or her approach to management?

And this is the second question from Google. Make sure your manager is answering your questions (not just those of the business).

Not sure where to start? Here are 40 smart questions to ask your boss.

5. What could your manager do to make your work experience more meaningful for you personally?

The connection between personal and professional satisfaction is strong. In our people management study we found that 94% of employees with great bosses have a passion and energy for their jobs, while just 59% with bad bosses say the same.

People with great managers feel more passion for their jobs.

Gaining feedback into how better managers can create better work experiences is paramount.

It’s a natural human need to be appreciated, but just 48% of employees feel they are receiving the right amount of feedback. Ten percent receive none at all, and 8% actually get more than they feel they need.

Only 48 percent of employees get the right amount of feedback from their managers.

Simply asking a question like this can clue you in regarding what is deemed appropriate. From there, you can help your managers deliver the “right” amount of feedback to their direct reports.

7. Does your manager have a solid grasp on the business as a whole beyond just his or her role or department?

It’s not enough to have technical expertise or historical knowledge of company processes. Employees want to know that their manager is also in tune with larger commercial initiatives and relays information on the company’s trajectory.

8. Does your manager communicate individual and team objectives clearly?

Gallup found that companies that implemented formal management policies around strength-based practices like communication, realized a 9-15% increase in employee engagement. Doing so even led to a 72% drop in employee turnover among organizations traditionally prone to high turnover.

Join 10,000 companies solving the most complex people problems with PI.

Hire the right people, inspire their best work, design dream teams, and sustain engagement for the long haul.

Asking the right questions adds depth to manager evaluation forms.

As a starting point, these eight questions should provide more depth to manager evaluation forms. However, your company should also incorporate questions that allow employees to respond on a scale, such as 1-10 or “totally disagree”-“totally agree.” A scale allows you to assess not just responses but also how strongly or intensely employees feel.

Test your knowledge of what makes a great manager:

 

Persuader

Jackie is the SVP of talent optimization at PI. She was born in Switzerland but isn't a dual citizen.

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