Facilitator Speaker Notes — SMART Goals & Accountability ======================================================== Generated: 2026-07-09 ############################################################ ## SMART Goals & Accountability (8 slides) ############################################################ --- Slide 1: SMART Goals — The Non-Negotiable Foundation --- Set the stage. Open the "SMART Goals & Accountability" session by introducing this slide — "SMART Goals — The Non-Negotiable Foundation". Briefly explain why this topic matters to the managers in the room and what they'll be able to do differently by the end of the deck. Invite people to keep a notepad handy for questions. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. S — Specific. Clear, unambiguous outcome. Not "improve communication" → "Send team meeting agendas 24 hours in advance, starting [date]" Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "s — specific" from their own team before moving on. 2. M — Measurable. How will you know it was achieved? Not "be more responsive" → "Reply to all internal messages within 4 business hours" Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "m — measurable" from their own team before moving on. 3. A — Achievable. Challenging but realistic given current skills, resources, and workload. Unattainable goals on a PIP are legally problematic. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "a — achievable" from their own team before moving on. 4. R — Relevant. Directly connected to job responsibilities and business outcomes — not arbitrary targets Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "r — relevant" from their own team before moving on. 5. T — Time-bound. A clear deadline or review date. "By end of Q2" or "Within 30 days of today" — not "eventually" or "soon" Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "t — time-bound" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask: "How does this show up in your team today?" — let two or three people respond. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered smart goals — the non-negotiable foundation, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 2: Goal-Setting in Practice — Rewrites --- Transition in. Move into "Goal-Setting in Practice — Rewrites" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. Weak → Strong. "Improve client communication" → "Send written project updates to all clients every Friday by 5pm, starting [date]" Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "weak → strong" from their own team before moving on. 2. Weak → Strong. "Be more organized" → "Submit all project deliverables at least 48 hours before the deadline for the next 60 days" Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "weak → strong" from their own team before moving on. 3. Weak → Strong. "Work better with the team" → "Facilitate one team meeting per month with a pre-distributed agenda and documented action items" Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "weak → strong" from their own team before moving on. 4. The Test. Could an impartial third party evaluate whether this goal was achieved? If not, it's not specific or measurable enough. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the test" from their own team before moving on. 5. Why It Matters on a PIP. Vague PIP goals cannot be objectively evaluated — they invite subjectivity and create discrimination risk Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "why it matters on a pip" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Pose a quick scenario and ask the group how they would apply this principle. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered goal-setting in practice — rewrites, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 3: Calibration Sessions — Ensuring Consistency and Equity --- Transition in. Move into "Calibration Sessions — Ensuring Consistency and Equity" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. What Calibration Is. Cross-manager review sessions where ratings are compared and challenged to ensure consistent standards and equity Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what calibration is" from their own team before moving on. 2. The Halo Effect. Rating someone high in all areas because of one strong quality. Solution: require specific evidence for each dimension rating. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the halo effect" from their own team before moving on. 3. The Recency Bias. Rating based on the last 30 days rather than the full review period. Solution: document throughout the year, not just at review time. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the recency bias" from their own team before moving on. 4. The Equity Check. Are comparable performers rated comparably? Are any patterns emerging by protected class? Calibration surfaces these questions. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the equity check" from their own team before moving on. 5. Your Role. Come prepared with specific documented evidence — not impressions, not personality assessments, not how much you personally like the employee Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "your role" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Invite a participant to paraphrase the key idea back to the room to confirm understanding. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered calibration sessions — ensuring consistency and equity, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 4: Documentation — The 24-Hour Rule --- Transition in. Move into "Documentation — The 24-Hour Rule" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. The Rule. Every coaching conversation must be documented within 24 hours — date, specific behaviors discussed, agreed commitments, next steps, follow-up date Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the rule" from their own team before moving on. 2. Why 24 Hours. Memory fades quickly. Delayed documentation risks inaccuracies and significantly weakens the record's legal defensibility. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "why 24 hours" from their own team before moving on. 3. "Documentation Is Not Punishment". It protects the employee (fair process), the manager (demonstrated coaching was given), and the organization (defensible record) Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of ""documentation is not punishment"" from their own team before moving on. 4. What to Capture. Date/time/location of conversation, specific behavioral observations (not personality labels), the employee's response, agreed next steps, follow-up date Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what to capture" from their own team before moving on. 5. What NOT to Capture. Your opinions about the employee's character, speculation about their motivations, second-hand information you did not personally observe Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what not to capture" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask for a show of hands: who has faced a situation like this in the last month? Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered documentation — the 24-hour rule, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 5: PIP Goals — What "Gotcha Goals" Look Like --- Transition in. Move into "PIP Goals — What "Gotcha Goals" Look Like" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. Gotcha Goal (Prohibited). Goals intentionally set to be unattainable — designed to engineer termination rather than support genuine improvement Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "gotcha goal (prohibited)" from their own team before moving on. 2. Why They're Prohibited. They create legal liability by proving the PIP was a predetermined termination process, not a genuine improvement opportunity Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "why they're prohibited" from their own team before moving on. 3. The Test for a PIP Goal. Could the employee realistically meet this goal with full effort and the support being provided? If not, it must be revised. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the test for a pip goal" from their own team before moving on. 4. Examples of Gotcha Goals. Requiring 100% attendance from someone on approved intermittent FMLA leave; requiring skills the employee was never trained in within 30 days Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "examples of gotcha goals" from their own team before moving on. 5. Examples of Real Goals. "Submit project deliverables by the agreed deadline for 8 of the next 10 assignments" — specific, achievable, measurable, time-bound Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "examples of real goals" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask: "How does this show up in your team today?" — let two or three people respond. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered pip goals — what "gotcha goals" look like, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 6: Phase 3 Success Indicators — Accountability Benchmarks --- Transition in. Move into "Phase 3 Success Indicators — Accountability Benchmarks" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. SMART Goal Coverage. 100% of direct reports have documented SMART goals within 30 days of Phase 3 kick-off — no exceptions Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "smart goal coverage" from their own team before moving on. 2. PIP Success Rate. 60% or higher — employees who receive a genuine PIP with real support should succeed at plan goals more than half the time Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "pip success rate" from their own team before moving on. 3. Review Completion Rate. 95% or higher — every employee receives a formal, documented performance conversation Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "review completion rate" from their own team before moving on. 4. Coaching Frequency. No employee goes more than two weeks without a documented coaching touch point during a performance concern period Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "coaching frequency" from their own team before moving on. 5. What Low Numbers Signal. PIP success rate below 60% → PIPs issued too late or with unattainable goals. Review completion below 95% → manager accountability gap. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "what low numbers signal" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Pose a quick scenario and ask the group how they would apply this principle. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered phase 3 success indicators — accountability benchmarks, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 7: Phase 3 Do/Don't — Goals & Accountability --- Transition in. Move into "Phase 3 Do/Don't — Goals & Accountability" by linking it to the previous slide. Give the group a one-sentence "why this matters" before walking through the points below. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. DO. Set SMART goals with every direct report — specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "do" from their own team before moving on. 2. DO. Document all coaching conversations within 24 hours with specific details and agreed next steps Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "do" from their own team before moving on. 3. DO. Come to calibration sessions with documented evidence — not impressions or general feelings Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "do" from their own team before moving on. 4. DON'T. Set "gotcha goals" on a PIP — goals must be genuinely achievable with the support provided Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "don't" from their own team before moving on. 5. DON'T. Skip weekly check-ins during an active PIP — regular coaching support is both an ethical obligation and a legal protection Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "don't" from their own team before moving on. 6. DON'T. Allow the annual review to be the first time an employee hears about a performance concern Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "don't" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Invite a participant to paraphrase the key idea back to the room to confirm understanding. Timing & transition. Aim for roughly 6–7 minutes on this slide. When the points have landed, transition forward with a short bridge such as "Now that we've covered phase 3 do/don't — goals & accountability, let's look at what comes next." --- Slide 8: Preparing for L3 Certification --- Bring it home. This is the final slide — "Preparing for L3 Certification". Use it to consolidate the key messages of the session and connect them back to the participants' day-to-day work. Slow your pace here and make eye contact. Talking points (walk through each in order): 1. L3 Timing. Completed at the end of Month 9 / Phase 3 Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "l3 timing" from their own team before moving on. 2. Performance Case Analysis. Demonstrates understanding of SMART goals, coaching documentation, PIP delivery, and legal compliance awareness Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "performance case analysis" from their own team before moving on. 3. Observed Role-Play. PIP delivery or active coaching scenario — assessed on SMART goal alignment, SBI language, legal compliance, and genuine supportiveness Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "observed role-play" from their own team before moving on. 4. Study Focus. Know the 5-step coaching framework cold. Practice the exact language for PIP opening, responding to "Am I being fired?", and closing with next steps. Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "study focus" from their own team before moving on. 5. The Assessor's Question. "Does this manager genuinely believe the employee can succeed?" — if the answer isn't yes, the role-play fails regardless of technical accuracy Facilitator tip: say this in your own words, then ask the group for a real example of "the assessor's question" from their own team before moving on. Engage the room. Ask for a show of hands: who has faced a situation like this in the last month? Wrap-up. Aim for 6–7 minutes. Recap the single most important takeaway, point participants to the quiz and scenario exercises for this module, and thank them for their engagement.