Skip Navigation

FEEDBACK SUMMARIES

 
 

What Are Feedback Summaries?

For years, we referred to employee assessments as “performance reviews” – and you may still hear that term – but we now call them “feedback summaries” because they should be a summary of the coaching and feedback you have received about your performance and contributions throughout a given period (typically the past year).

Your feedback summary involves a summary document and a discussion of your performance. Its purpose is to provide a reality-based view of how you’re doing, help you realize your potential and motivate you to maximize your contribution to the team and Koch’s long-term success.

 
 

A Principle-Based Approach

It is important to understand the principles that inform our approach to feedback summaries. Without this knowledge, misapplications often occur. Here are some common misapplications (Feedback Summaries are NOT...) and principles we strive to apply instead. 

Feedback Summaries are an Application of... Feedback Summaries are NOT...
Respect: It is respectful to clearly communicate how employees are contributing and can improve, especially when there are significant performance gaps that require rapid progress to stay in the role or the company.

Alignment of Incentives
: Honest and clear feedback helps employees understand what will be most beneficial for them and Koch.

Closing Gaps
: No matter how well someone is doing, they can always improve and do better.

Supervisor Responsibilities and Expectations
: Supervisors are expected to provide honest feedback, help employees understand their strengths and weaknesses, realize their potential and maximize their contributions. 
  • A list of everything an employee did 
  • A compilation of all the feedback gathered
  • A performance rating exercise (such as below, meeting or exceeding expectations)
  • A compliance requirement or something you do for HR.

 

 

How Are Feedback Summaries Developed?

 

Your supervisor will develop the written feedback summary and plan what to discuss with you by considering:

  • Ongoing discussions with you
  • Your contributions to your RRE, other results and culture
  • Feedback from others (sometimes called 360-degree feedback)
  • Your self-evaluation

The written summary typically includes no more than a handful of your most significant contributions, 2-3 strengths and development areas and a forward-focused message about how you can improve contributions in the coming year(s).

While a document is helpful, the feedback summary is about communication. The discussion is a chance to ask questions, connect to reality, explore what you could do differently in the future, and envision what you could do to better leverage your gifts to contribute more.

 

Tips and Expectations

 
At Koch, everyone is expected to take the feedback summary process seriously.  Below are tips and expectations for each essential element of effective feedback summaries.
 

 

Your feedback summary should help you reflect on your performance and how you’ve responded to coaching, understand how you’ve contributed to results and culture which affect your compensation, and spark ideas for how you might adjust your RREs.

Learn more about our principle-based approach to Employee Development.