How’s that project coming? What’s the reason for the delay on that one thing? Why’s everyone being so quiet today?
You’ll never know unless you ask! Ask check-in questions, that is. Check-in questions help solve problems and track progress. They’re also the simplest way to engage with employees at meetings, interviews, and more.
Today, we have a whole torrent of questions to:
Why should you have to do all of the talking? Meetings are critical for updates and expectations, but they’re valuable sources of information for management and leadership, too.
Do this regularly, and employees will know there’s a space and place for them to provide feedback, raise concerns, and ask questions of their own.
Getting to know you questions could pull double-duty as icebreakers. But these are a little more straightforward while still being insightful.
Answers to these questions can help companies personalize employee recognition. They help us become familiar with someone’s values, habits, and preferences. While suited to newer hires, they’re also helpful for reserved or introverted employees.
Posting a question of the day in the team chat or on the employee wall is more of a mind exercise than something people are required to respond to right away.
These questions can inspire unique observations, unveil possibilities, and create a greater awareness of one’s surroundings. This is especially beneficial for engagement and innovation. It can even boost workplace appreciation.
One-on-one meetings can include reviews, project updates, or just general catching up. These questions help us measure job engagement, satisfaction, and general well-being.
You should be choosier with questions during one-on-ones. They need to be relevant to the purpose of the meeting and easy enough to answer without the employee feeling cornered. More than anything, you need to be a good listener when they respond.
Would you rather questions are for workplace discussions and–potentially–debate. It’s open, visible polling with plenty of opportunity for follow-up questions. Some also reveal pretty essential personality traits that inform our recognition strategies.
The results can act as company feedback, next steps, or just-for-fun information. It may be best not to mix them. The fun ones are great for more informal discussions, icebreakers, and team-building sessions.
Unfortunately, you can’t just start rattling off any old question we put on this page and expect all of the benefits. Here are some tips for doing it right.
You’ll derive a lot more value from answers longer than “No” but shorter than an entire chapter of someone’s life. Be ready to redirect if they start going on a tangent, and to follow up for more detail if you get a one-word response.
Instances where you should let go and hear them out include “would you rather” questions meant to start discussion and check-in questions where you’re directly asking for feedback.
It can be helpful to know if an employee has a family, where they’re from, what their upbringing was like, and other background info. Most of this information presents itself naturally over time, so try not to pry.
Questions should avoid anything that could be a personal pain point. If you get short or unclear answers to basic questions about their loved ones or past, move on.
To put it plainly, asking too many questions is annoying. Avoid subjecting individuals to regular Q&A sessions. Save the onslaught of general questions for employee surveys and polls.
Question of the day is great because they don’t have to have a response right away. Check-in questions at meetings work because they can get things they’re already thinking about off their chests. Fun getting to know you questions can come a few at a time, on occasion.
Asking the right questions helps us connect as a team, and so does peer recognition with HeyTaco.
Teams can use virtual tacos in chat to express appreciation or approval. Give and receive tacos with coworkers and watch as their engagement moves them up the leaderboard. It’s a peer recognition platform, a gamified reward system, and a data analysis tool in one.
Learn more about how HeyTaco helps create a stronger company culture, and ask your employees if they’d like to give it a try.
Not done asking questions? Okay, here are a few answers to common questions you have about questions.
Yes, check-in questions during meetings improve communication and collaboration. They also make employees feel as though their take counts. Since you can tailor the questions to the topic at hand, there’s rarely an excuse to skip them.
If you don’t ask questions during meetings, you’re overlooking points of dissatisfaction or confusion. You’re also not hearing important ideas or concerns that could save the day.
You should try, yes. It should feel like a tradition to employees, they should expect that there will be opportunities for them to share.
There will inevitably be instances when you’re crunched for time or just need all eyes and ears on one thing. It’s no big deal to skip check-in questions on those occasions.
The trick to making it good is not seeming like you’re not assigning them “team bonding questions.” Instead, every day during a break or a slow time, ask a question in chat or at the end of meetings.
Fun, casual team bonding questions:
Work-related team bonding questions: