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Stop the Annual Surprise: Build Reviews Around Ongoing Performance Feedback

Posted 02/01/26

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The biggest complaint employees have about performance reviews is simple: “Why am I just hearing this now?” When feedback is saved for a once-a-year meeting, it creates anxiety, defensiveness, and confusion.

On Beyond Compliance, guest Jack Gilmore explained that strong teams rely on ongoing performance feedback rather than annual evaluation surprises. When communication is consistent, the formal review becomes a summary—not a shock.

Why Annual Reviews Create Problems


Annual-only review systems often fail for predictable reasons:

  • Delayed feedback allows small issues to grow into large frustrations.
  • Memory bias causes managers to focus only on recent events.
  • Defensiveness increases when employees feel blindsided.
  • Trust erodes when expectations were never clearly reinforced.

When performance conversations happen only once per year, employees assume everything is fine until it suddenly is not.

What Ongoing Performance Feedback Looks Like


Ongoing performance feedback does not require weekly formal reviews. It requires intentional rhythm.

1. Short, Structured Check-Ins

  • 15–30 minute monthly conversations
  • Review progress toward 3–5 role goals
  • Discuss obstacles before they escalate

2. Immediate Coaching

If an issue arises, address it within days—not months. Direct feedback delivered calmly and clearly builds respect. Waiting builds resentment.

3. Regular Recognition

Feedback is not only corrective. Recognition reinforces what “good” looks like. When employees understand which behaviors align with company values, they repeat them.

How This Strengthens Culture


When leaders provide ongoing performance feedback, several positive shifts happen:

  • Expectations become visible.
  • Employees feel supported, not judged.
  • Managers gain credibility.
  • Performance improves steadily instead of reactively.

Jack emphasized that trust is built through consistency. When leaders communicate expectations throughout the year, employees rarely feel surprised during formal evaluations.

Turning the Annual Review Into a Summary


When feedback happens consistently, the annual review changes tone entirely. Instead of confrontation, it becomes:

  • A recap of documented conversations
  • A confirmation of progress made
  • A discussion about future growth

The review meeting becomes forward-looking rather than backward-looking.

Simple Structure for Ongoing Performance Feedback


If you want to shift away from annual surprises, implement this structure:

  1. Define 3–5 measurable goals for each role.
  2. Translate company values into observable behaviors.
  3. Schedule monthly or quarterly check-ins.
  4. Document conversations briefly and consistently.
  5. Address issues immediately and professionally.

This structure reduces anxiety while increasing accountability.

Ongoing Performance Feedback Creates Stability


Organizations that rely on ongoing performance feedback avoid the emotional rollercoaster of annual-only systems. Expectations stay clear. Coaching stays timely. Culture stays aligned.

Performance reviews should not be a surprise. They should reflect conversations that have already happened.

To hear the full discussion with Jack Gilmore on Beyond Compliance, listen below.

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