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Following Through After a Hard Employee Conversation

by Julie Tuggle-Nguyen


Part 4 of the Series: making Hard Employee Conversations Easier

In the first article of this series, we explored why difficult employee conversations feel so uncomfortable, and why avoiding them often creates bigger problems. The second focused on preparation, while the third covered what to do inside the conversation itself.

This final article is about what happens after the conversation. While many leaders spend significant time thinking about how to deliver difficult feedback, what happens afterward is often what determines whether real improvement occurs.

Document the Conversation
One of the most important steps after a difficult conversation is making sure there is clear alignment on what was discussed and what happens next. Whether you use AI tools to transcribe and summarize the meeting or simply write your own recap, it’s important to create a clear record of the conversation, including what needs to change, by when, and how success will be measured.
Some leaders send a written summary afterward, while others ask the employee to share their understanding of the discussion and next steps. Either approach can help confirm expectations, reduce misunderstandings, and create accountability for both the employee and the leader.

Keep Tracking Progress
Difficult conversations should never become “one-and-done” leadership moments. One of the most common mistakes leaders make is having the conversation, then failing to follow up consistently — only to find themselves dealing with the same issues months later.

Instead, continue documenting observations, progress, and ongoing concerns so you can objectively evaluate whether meaningful change is happening over time. If the employee is on a formal performance improvement plan, schedule weekly check-ins to review progress, discuss support needs, and reinforce expectations.

In many organizations, improvement plans follow a 90-day timeline because lasting behavior change rarely happens overnight. And while the formal plan may end, the expectation is that the new behaviors will continue long term.

Make Balanced Observations
One of the more subtle leadership challenges after a difficult conversation is maintaining objectivity. Most leaders genuinely want employees to succeed. After delivering tough feedback, there’s often a natural tendency to look for signs of improvement quickly. In some cases, leaders become overly optimistic in the early stages and interpret small changes as larger progress than they really are.
That’s why balanced observation matters. Recognize improvement when you see it, and document it just as consistently as concerns. Employees need reinforcement when they are making progress. But at the same time, leaders must remain honest about whether the employee is fully operating at the level needed for success. Strong leadership requires both encouragement and accountability.

When Improvement Doesn’t Happen
As difficult as it is to receive negative feedback, lasting behavior change can also be incredibly difficult. Some employees respond positively and improve. Others may continue resisting the feedback or eventually return to old behaviors.

At some point, leaders have to assess whether the employee can realistically meet the expectations of the role. If improvement is not happening despite clear communication, support, and follow-through, additional action may become necessary. That could mean reassignment to a different role or, in some cases, termination.

Those decisions are never easy, but avoiding them can create larger issues for the team, the culture, and the business overall.

Maintain the Relationship
Throughout the entire process, professionalism matters. Treat employees with respect and dignity, especially during difficult situations. Stay focused, remain calm, and lead by example.

The reality is that hard conversations are part of leadership. But when leaders prepare thoughtfully, communicate clearly, and follow through consistently, those conversations become far less intimidating and far more effective.

Over time, that consistency builds something every strong business needs: trust, accountability, and a culture where people understand what’s expected and feel supported in doing their best work.

Julie Tuggle-Nguyen is Chief Human Resources Officer at Midwest BankCentre.
Submitted 9 days ago
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Categories: categoryHR By The Numbers
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