Employee Counselling
•Counselling
– Discussion of a
problem with an employee, to help the employee cope. The employee may be provided with advice and
reassurance as part of the communication process.
•Employee & Family
Assistance Programs
–Comprehensive company
programs that seek to help employees overcome personal and work-related
problems
Employee Discipline
•Management action to
encourage compliance with the organization’s standards
•Preventive Discipline
–Action taken prior to
any infraction to encourage employees to follow the rules
•Corrective Discipline
–Action that follows a
rule infraction and seeks to discourage further infractions
•Due Process
–Established rules and
procedures for disciplinary actions are followed and employees have an opportunity
to respond to the charges
•Progressive Discipline
–A type of discipline
whereby there are stronger penalties for repeated offences e.g. verbal
reprimand, written reprimand
Positive Discipline
•Positive discipline
takes a problem-solving approach to resolve the performance or behaviour issue:
–Focus on the specific
problem, rather than the employee’s attitude or personality
–Gain agreement that a
performance problem exists and that the employee is responsible
–Take a problem-solving
approach
–Document commitments
made
–Follow-up
DO’s and DON’Ts of
Counseling Your Employee
![]()
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Counseling is a process through
which one person helps another by purposeful conversation in an understanding
atmosphere. It seeks to establish a helping relationship in which the one
counseled can express their thoughts and feelings in such a way as to clarify
their own situation, come to terms with some new experience, see their
difficulty more objectively, and so face their problem with less anxiety and
tension. Its basic purpose is to assist the individual to make their own
decision from among the choices available to them. (British Association for
Counselling, Rugby 1989)
Supervisors use controls to help employees achieve
objectives. An employee's problem performance is often related to non-job
factors. Yet, personal problems generally get worse, not better without
professional help. The supervisor is in the best position to spot and handle
problems when they arise. He or she can use counseling to provide relief for
the troubled employee. Counseling is a behavioral control technique used
by the supervisor to solve performance problems. As a counselor, the supervisor
is a helper, discusses the employee's personal problems that are affecting his
or her job performance, aiming to resolve them. Supervisory counseling is
guidance of the employee's behavior.
An employee should be counseled when he or she has
personal problems that affect job performance. Supervisors should recognize
early signs. Signs of a troubled employee include:
|
· Sudden change of
behavior |
In the role of the counselor, the supervisor listens,
limits, and refers. The supervisor uses active
listening and reflective listening skills. By listening the supervisor
helps the employee to feel valued and understood.
The employee is encouraged to
talk and explore and to understand more about how he or she feels and
why. The employee can consider options and examine alternatives and may be able
to choose a solution to his or her problems. The supervisor can help the
employee develop clear objectives; to form specific action plans and to do,
with support what needs to be done. The supervisor
helps employees help themselves. In counseling, the supervisor limits
comments to the employee's job performance, since the supervisor is not an
expert in the problem area. The supervisor refers or gives information
to the employee. Informing mainly passes along data and information.
Counseling techniques range from directive to
non-directive, depending on the situation. Non-directive counseling reflects
what is said and felt. For example, a supervisor using the non-directive
approach would say, "You feel frustrated because you don't meet Rob's
approval." Directive counseling tells and advises. For example, a
supervisor using the directive approach would say, "I want you to
concentrate on your work and not worry about what the other employees do."
Interactive counseling combines them.
The Counseling Process
Step 1.
Describe the changed behavior.
Let the employee know that the organization is concerned with work performance.
The supervisor maintains work standards by being consistent in dealing with
troubled employees. Explain in very specific terms what the employee needs to
do in order to perform up to the organization's expectations. Don't moralize.
Restrict the confrontation to job performance.
Step 2.
Get employee comments on the changed behavior and the reason for it. Confine any negative comments to
the employee's job performance. Don't diagnose; you are not an expert. Listen
and protect confidentiality.
Step 3.
Agree on a solution.
Emphasize confidentiality. Don't be swayed or misled by emotional please,
sympathy tactics, or "hard-luck" stories. Explain that going for help
does not exclude the employee from standard disciplinary procedures and that it
does not open the door for special privileges.
Step 4.
Summarize and get a commitment to change. Seek commitment from the employee to meet work
standards and to get help, if necessary, with the problem.
Step 5.
Follow up. Once the
problem is resolved and a productive relationship is established, follow up is
needed.
Substance Abuse
Some problem performance stems from substance abuse. In
handling alcohol or drug abuse situations, the supervisor must avoid inferences
and stick to actual clues. He or she avoids giving advice. The supervisor gives
support and information, if needed, and makes clear that rehabilitation is the
employee's responsibility.
Career Guidance
Career counseling is a common supervisory activity. In
addition to job knowledge and skills, employees need to be punctual, diligent,
responsible, and receptive to supervision. Supervisors have an opportunity to
help employees understand that developing these behaviors can improve their
future success. Development is preparing employees for future jobs.
Bringing out the best in employees is the most powerful and most available
resource for supervisors to do more with less. Employee development produces
"win-win" agreements between supervisor and employee.
Post a Comment