TalentMap | Site FAQ
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  • Welcome
  • FAQ
    • General
      • What is employee engagement?
      • Why measure employee engagement?
      • What makes TalentMap different?
      • How do we measure the effect of engagement on productivity?
      • High satisfaction vs. low engagement (or vice versa)?
      • How is the engagement score linked to satisfaction?
      • What is involved in an online executive team briefing?
      • Shouldn’t we focus on areas with low scores?
      • What is key driver analysis?
      • What is a driver of engagement and why is it important?
      • How are engagement drivers derived?
      • What size group is required to do driver analysis?
      • What is the purpose of focus groups?
      • How should disclosure of employee comments be handled?
      • What response rate should we try to achieve?
      • What statistical measurement is used?
    • Completing a Survey
      • Is the survey confidential?
      • Does the survey need to be completed all at one time?
      • Can responses be changed once submitted?
      • Is the survey mandatory?
      • Will the results be shared with staff?
      • Will the survey ask for demographic information?
      • Is demographic information collected on the survey?
      • How long is the survey?
    • Survey Design
      • Why survey?
      • What dimensions do you measure?
      • Do you have a library of standard questionnaires?
      • How long is the survey open?
      • Do you prevent duplicate survey responses?
      • How often should we survey?
      • How long should the survey be open?
      • How long does the survey process take from start to finish?
      • What are the main objectives when conducting a survey?
      • Why does TalentMap use a 5-point rating scale?
      • Should we survey contract or term employees?
      • When should I conduct a pulse survey?
      • What is the purpose of the neutral option?
      • Can I save my responses and complete the survey later?
    • Benchmark
      • What industries do you have benchmark data for?
      • What is a Benchmark and why is it important?
    • Support
      • What kind of support can we expect during each phase of the survey process?
      • Does TalentMap provide technical support?
      • What are post-survey coaching check-ins?
  • OUR PHILOSOPHY
    • Engagement
      • TalentMap's Definition Of Employee Engagement
      • Benefits Of An Engaged Workforce
      • Realizing Why It Pays To Engage
      • How our Engagement Drivers Differ from Most
      • 11 Benefits of a Professional Engagement Survey
      • Measuring Engagement
    • How to Act on Survey Results
    • Building A High Response Rate
  • SECURITY & PRIVACY
    • Is our data secure?
      • Why TalentMap Does Not Release Raw Data
    • Is the client aggregate survey data confidential?
  • CONSULTING SERVICES
    • Focus Groups
    • JumpStart Action Planning
    • Train-The-Trainer Workshop
  • GUIDES & CHECKLISTS
    • Guides
      • Stay Interviews
      • One-on-One Meetings
      • Employee Onboarding
      • 360 Leadership
      • Pulse Surveys
      • Focus Groups
      • Action Planning
      • Exit Interviews
    • Checklists
      • Organizational Readiness
      • Survey Program Design
      • Action Planning
  • WEBINARS
    • Return to Office: Strategies to Boost Employee Engagement and Productivity
    • How To Reduce Absenteeism & Presenteeism in the Workplace
    • Employee Engagement by Generation
    • How to Promote Praise and Influence Engagement
    • Creating an Effective Mental Health Strategy
    • Helping Management Better Connect with Employees
    • How to Recruit, Engage and Retain the Right Talent
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  1. FAQ
  2. General

How should disclosure of employee comments be handled?

TalentMap recommends as much transparency as possible. The ideal is to share all comments “as is” but very few management teams have the fortitude. Full buy-in is needed from your CEO for this approach. For most organizations, the following seems to work:

  • All members of the senior team see all comments

  • Directors see all comments that fall in their respective portfolios

The challenge is how or whether to disclose comments to managers.

Is the manager’s group large enough to protect anonymity?

It’s human nature to try to guess who said what. Typically comments are NOT to be shared when a manager has less than 20 direct reports.

Is it possible to share comments without causing too much upset?

Some managers are sophisticated and can put “hurtful” comments in proper context, but there are many less able to do so, and they’ll struggle with negative comments.

A way to bridge these issues is to provide managers with a random or representative sample of comments from the larger department or division. In other words, all managers in a given department get the same set of comments. This approach gives managers exposure to the tone and nature of verbatim comments, which can be very direct and personal.

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Last updated 11 months ago

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