Ensure Your New Employee's Success With These 5 Steps If you're hired the right person, following these tips will help make sure your new hire performs to your expectations.

By Doug and Polly White Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

You believe your new employee will bring great value to your organization. You expect they will help to ease some of the workload and burden. Mostly, you hope they will deliver the results you reasonably want and need within the cultural norms of your organization.

However, if your desires are to be met, you need to make sure that you are setting your employee up to succeed. To do this, follow these five steps:

1. Make sure that your expectations are reasonable.

Do you have or have you had other similarly experienced people who were able to meet or exceed your goals? If so, it is probably a safe bet that your expectations are reasonable. If not, you may need to adjust your expectations. Obviously, this is a judgment call that you will have to make.

Related: Want Your Business to Grow? Help Your Employees Succeed.

2. Ensure that the employee clearly understands your expectations.

More than 50 percent of the disciplinary actions we've dealt with in our careers have had at least some aspect of misunderstanding between the employee and the manager. First, explain your expectations in detail. Then, ask your employee to describe to you how they will fulfill the requirements. This will help to eliminate miscommunication.

3. Remove all organizational roadblocks.

You should remove all roadblocks that are internal to the organization. These speed bumps may include policies, procedures, internal politics or a lack of critical resources (such as the right equipment to do the job). Correct all of these issues. Of course, you can't be responsible for removing employee-generated roadblocks (such as personal problems).

4. Train the employee and give him or her time to practice.

While your employee professed experience, all organizations are unique. Different computer systems, policies, procedures and corporate culture can prevent good employees from being immediately successful. Make sure the employee is appropriately trained and has had sufficient time to practice the new skills.

Related: Want Your Business to Be a Success? Set Your Employees Up to Succeed.

5. Ensure that the employee is motivated to perform.

Most employees need both rewards and consequences to perform well. An environment that is skewed heavily to either one or the other will result in dysfunction. Giving employees praise for a job well done often results in them repeating the behavior. Catch employees doing something right and tell them about it.

Likewise, employees must understand that poor performance may result in discipline and/or termination. Avoiding negative feedback may make things easier for the manager in the short term, but it's unfair to the employee and will result in greater problems in the long term.

If you have checked all of these boxes and your employee is still not delivering the results that you expect, want and need, you probably do not have the right person in the job. The only possibilities left are that your employee is unwilling or unable to meet your expectations. Either way, this person is probably not right for the position.

Even if the employee is delivering results, but doing it in a way that is not compatible with your culture, he or she may not be a good fit. For example, a supervisor who delivers results by belittling and berating those under him may not work well in your supportive environment. On the other hand, when your employee is delivering the results you expect and behaving within your cultural norms, you have hired the right person.

Related: Seven Steps to Coaching Your Employees to Success

Doug and Polly White

BIZ Experiencess, Small Business Experts, Consultants, Speakers

Doug and Polly White are small business experts, speakers and consultants who work with BIZ Experiencess through Whitestone Partners. They are also co-authors of the book Let Go to GROW, which focuses on growing your business.

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