Clear Review has joined Advanced - Discover our full suite of powerful and innovative people management solutions

Find out more
Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter for inspiration, ideas and updates on the latest in performance management.

Back to blog

Why personal development plans don’t work. And how to fix them.

Personal development plan

Do per­son­al devel­op­ment plans (PDPs) work? Or are they just a mean­ing­less com­pli­ance exercise? 

PDPs should help your employ­ees achieve their per­son­al devel­op­ment goals. For a busi­ness, they are impor­tant for plan­ning the future work­force, suc­ces­sion and to under­stand your organisation’s man­pow­er. Cre­at­ing good, well thought out per­son­al devel­op­ment goals for work will help your employ­ees feel engaged in their job and improve per­for­mance. Research sug­gests that at least 73% of employ­ees believe the oppor­tu­ni­ty for pro­fes­sion­al devel­op­ment is nec­es­sary for employ­ees to be sat­is­fied in their job. Many peo­ple end up leav­ing a job, cit­ing lack of per­son­al devel­op­ment as a reason. 

The real­i­ty is, often for employ­ees, PDPs become an unen­gag­ing bureau­crat­ic process that pre­vent them from growth in their job. Bad PDPs often leave out the per­son­al devel­op­ment bit of the plan, turn­ing it into more of a per­son­al attack plan. Most PDPs come up once a year due to either an employ­ee not doing their job well or as a bar­ri­er to entry for a new role. Devel­op­ment goals are often rushed at the end of the year and include things which don’t help the employ­ee devel­op in a way that they want.

We spoke to some of our col­leagues about their expe­ri­ences of PDPs in pre­vi­ous jobs. One col­league shared her expe­ri­ence of how a bad­ly pre­pared PDP act­ed as a bar­ri­er to entry for a man­age­r­i­al role: 

I was put on a PDP as our CEO recog­nised I was a high per­former. He asked my man­ag­er to do this so they could get me up to scratch to join the Senior Man­age­ment Team. How­ev­er, my PDP was writ­ten by my line man­ag­er and it includ­ed things like, dress more like a man­ag­er, stop being friend­ly with oth­er mem­bers of the team — ulti­mate­ly act more like a man­ag­er. These were obvi­ous­ly not attain­able in any way! I realised it was all going wrong when I was sent for man­age­ment train­ing and the guy lead­ing the course looked at my PDP and said, you don’t need to do any of these things, you need a new job.’ Ulti­mate­ly my boss was try­ing to block me from pro­gress­ing and was threat­ened by the rela­tion­ship I had with our CEO.”

Some PDPs end up becom­ing a train­ing exer­cise, to cre­ate a mini ver­sion of your cur­rent man­ag­er, rather than try­ing to under­stand which skills the employ­ee wants to devel­op. One col­league shared his expe­ri­ence of a PDP which lim­it­ed his cre­ativ­i­ty and didn’t help him take his career where he want­ed to take it: 

Often when man­agers cre­ate PDPs, they imply that the best way to be good at a job is copy what they do. This is often iron­ic because you get non-tech­ni­cal peo­ple man­ag­ing tech­ni­cal teams or vice ver­sa. These PDPs try to mould you into a cor­po­rate idea of what they think you should be. Any cre­ativ­i­ty you have they don’t want. When you point out how some­thing should be dif­fer­ent­ly, they get defen­sive. Some man­agers set per­son­al devel­op­ment plans to mould you into a mini them, not under­stand­ing where you want to take your career.”

Some per­son­al devel­op­ment plans unfor­tu­nate­ly become a per­son­al attack plan:

In one of my jobs, my PDP was based on Myers Brig­gs which isn’t the right way to struc­ture a work­force. They made every employ­ee— over 6000 peo­ple— do Myers Brig­gs and set objec­tives on the out­comes of your per­son­al­i­ty test. Moral of the sto­ry — don’t base objec­tives on psy­cho­log­i­cal pro­files of an employee.”

What should a good PDP look like?

A good PDP is about up-skilling and improv­ing employ­a­bil­i­ty, whilst help­ing the com­pa­ny meet its objec­tives. PDPs should be a joint part­ner­ship in which both the employ­ee and your organ­i­sa­tion ben­e­fit. It shouldn’t include things that aren’t achiev­able and should be some­thing that you are already plan­ning to do. 

How­ev­er, to ensure that PDPs are effec­tive and work, per­son­al devel­op­ment goals should be designed and put in place in the same way as oth­er busi­ness goals. For per­son­al devel­op­ment goals to be effec­tive, they need to be, aligned, account­able, agile and assessable. 

The four As

Aligned

Align­ing per­son­al devel­op­ment goals with com­pa­ny goals can help your employ­ees set a clear path and give them a pur­pose. This ensures that they’re always work­ing towards some­thing that is rel­e­vant to them as well as the company. 

Account­able

Employ­ees need to be account­able for their per­son­al devel­op­ment goals. If their goals are aligned to the company’s goals, nat­u­ral­ly they should be account­able for them too. A PDP shows an organisation’s com­mit­ment towards their peo­ple and if employ­ees are account­able for their goals, they are show­ing their com­mit­ment towards their organ­i­sa­tion. One study revealed that you have a 65% chance of com­plet­ing a goal if you com­mit to some­one. There may be ways in which employ­ees can put account­abil­i­ty into their per­son­al goals. For exam­ple, they might put a strat­e­gy or struc­ture in place, have reg­u­lar catch-ups and check-ins with their man­ag­er, or put small­er actions in place to help move along their goals. 

Agile

Goals should be agile and give room for flex­i­bil­i­ty. Set­ting short­er term goals which help employ­ees with achiev­ing their ulti­mate goal, gives them the flex­i­bil­i­ty to change things that aren’t rel­e­vant any­more. It gives employ­ees a chance to reflect on what is and isn’t work­ing — ensur­ing that they’re always work­ing towards what they want. Per­son­al devel­op­ment needs — much like busi­ness needs — don’t come up once a year.

Assess­able

Final­ly, goals should be assess­able so that progress can be mea­sured. Employ­ees should be able to accu­rate­ly assess how far they are from reach­ing their goal. Hav­ing assess­able goals forces employ­ees to be spe­cif­ic about their desired out­come rather than fluffy” and vague. Stud­ies have shown that when peo­ple cre­ate goals that are spe­cif­ic and chal­leng­ing, it leads to high­er per­for­mance, 90% of the time. 

The 4 As” aren’t an exhaus­tive list, and there are oth­er ways in which man­agers and employ­ees can cre­ate good per­son­al devel­op­ment goals. But the key ele­ment with cre­at­ing a good PDP is that the same impor­tance that is placed on busi­ness goals, needs to be placed on per­son­al devel­op­ment goals too. This can help your man­agers cre­ate a plan that works, empow­ers your employ­ees and helps them grow. 

Want to learn more about goal setting?

Watch out webi­nar on Tack­ling the 6 biggest issues around objec­tive set­ting for your organ­i­sa­tion.” This webi­nar will clear up OKR’s, agile, team, col­lab­o­ra­tive, SMART, devel­op­men­tal and indi­vid­ual objec­tives once and for all. 

Sign me up!

Relat­ed articles

How to Get Employees to Care About Personal Development Objectives
Armed with this information, show your employees why they should be motivated and engaged with their development objectives. If your organisation is eager to motivate your employees, increase engagement and lower staff turnover rates, then get them enthused about their personal development…
Read article
Personal Development Reviews (PDR): 8 Common Mistakes | Clear Review
Per­son­al devel­op­ment is an impor­tant per­for­mance man­age­ment con­sid­er­a­tion. Don’t make these common mistakes and sab­o­tage your team members’ progress.
Read article