a Talking to your Subordinate or Direct
¨ What is the status of the marketing documents?
¨ How far along are you in your analysis?
¨ Are you almost done with the technical report?
¨ When are you going to finish the design plans?
¨ Can you give me a status on your progress so far?
¨ How is the reporting assignment going?
¨ When can you give me a working draft by?
b Project Change
c Deadline
¨ Do you think you can finish the marketing report by Friday?
d Subordinate asking you Questions
¨ Do a search on Google and see if you can find the information there.
¨ I think Stacy will know the answer. She is very familiar with that topic.
¨ I don’t think we ever decided on a specific way. I think it might be better to do this before that.
e Encouraging
¨ Hey James, I think you’re doing a great job and it is not going unnoticed.
¨ You’re doing great. Keep up the good work.
¨ I told my manager about your performance. He was quite impressed. Keep up the good work.
¨ It wasn’t as bad as you think. I also saw definite improvements so you shouldn’t give up.
f Reprimanding
¨ You have been late for work on a regular basis. You better start coming to work on time.
¨ The report was due last Friday. What’s going on?
¨ I was working on three other assignments. I just couldn’t finish them all.
g Talking to Direct – Interactive Practice
¨ A: “John, are you going to complete the report on time?”
B: “I am confident that I will have it done by this Friday.”
A: “How far along are you?”
B: “I have completed the preliminary review, analyzed the data, and I am almost done writing the analytical review.”
A: “That’s great. It looks like you are ahead of schedule. When you are done, send it to me for review.”
B: “I’ll send it to you Friday morning. That should give you a day to review it.”
A: “That’s great. Keep up the good work.”
¨ A: “Can you give me an update on your assignments?”
B: “Yeah. I’m helping with the performance testing, I’ve met with the partners for the integration project, and I’m finishing up the documents on the internal tool.”
A: “That’s good. Can you start sending me a weekly report? That will help me keep track of your progress regularly.”
B: “No problem. Do you want it by the start of Monday, or do you want it Friday evening.”
A: “I’m probably not going to read it until Monday, so just send it to me by Monday morning.”
B: “What do you want me to include in the weekly report?”
A: “Include what you did for the week, what you’re going to do for the next week, and include any other issues you have.”
B: “I’ll start doing that this week.”
A: “Great. Thanks.”
A: “John, can I see you in my office?”
B: “I’ll be right over.”
A: “Have a seat… I’m concerned about your performance lately. Is there something I should know about?”
B: “I’ve been pretty occupied at home. I apologize for letting it affect work. I’ll definitely pay more attention.”
A: “I understand, but I’m still having to take some heat on your work. You have been late numerous times, your projects are not as detailed as it used to be, and you missed a deadline last week.”
B: “I am really sorry, and I won’t let it happen again. I understand that I have been underperforming, and I will step it up.”
A: “I hope so. I’ll explain it to the director. But I don’t know how much more he will tolerate. That’s all I had so you better go back to work.”
B: “Ok. I really will change things around. Thanks for understanding.”