Sometimes, less is more, more or less. That applies to people, specifically
who you keep when you have declining budgets that force tech staff layoffs.
Got that?
What follows might not be for you. I'm not sure it's for me, for that matter.
Read and decide whether this is good advice for you, or whether it would make
you a cold-hearted member of the illegitimi.
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Start with a well-documented statistic: The best employees are, by every
measure, 10 times more effective than average ones. Next, check your
compensation system. I'll bet you don't pay them 10 times as much.
The curve is nonlinear, which means that, in general, if you have an accurate
eye for talent, every additional dollar you pay for talent pays off more than
the dollar before it.
Which means your most expensive employees are cheaper than your cheapest ones.
Conversely, your least expensive employees cost you the most, when viewed from
the perspective of bang per buck.
Next, we need to talk about your standards -- namely, whether they're high
enough. Put plainly: When you rate that an employee "meets expectations," are
your expectations as high as they ought to be? Or are you giving accepting
mediocrity because you just aren't willing to insist on more and to take the
unpleasant steps needed to get it?
It's a difficult question to answer, because you only know what you know, and
you have a strong incentive -- the intense desire all of us have to practice
avoidance in the face of unpleasant tasks -- to give yourself the benefit of the
doubt.
Here's one way to start getting a handle on the question: Look closely to
determine whether you have any employees who "hide behind the herd." They're the
employees who handle routine responsibilities just fine, but who only accomplish
anything beyond the routine by "collaborating" with other employees, even when
your instructions were for them to handle the situation on their own.
If you have any employees like this, you can do much better.
If you can, it's time to raise your expectations so these folks no longer meet
them. Don't hide in the bushes to trap them. Be open about it. Make it clear
you're raising the bar and let them know what it's going to take from now on to
continue to be considered a successful employee.