How to Write Performance Reviews for Difficult People at Work Without Escalating Conflict

Wednesday, June 03, 2026
Time: 11:00 AM PDT | 02:00 PM EDT
Duration: 60 Minutes   Webinar Id: 31558
IMG Brenda Neckvatal
Live Session
$149.00
Single Attendee
$299.00
Group Attendees
Recorded Session
$199.00
Single Attendee
$399.00
Group Attendees
Combo Live+Recorded
$299.00
Single Attendee
$599.00
Group Attendees

Overview:

Writing performance reviews for difficult employees is one of the most uncomfortable responsibilities leaders face. Not because performance cannot be addressed, but because the process has been distorted by avoidance, misuse, and poor training.

Difficult employees tend to challenge authority, resist feedback, debate language, and test consistency. When performance reviews are vague, emotionally charged, or disconnected from real-time feedback, they become a flashpoint rather than a tool. Leaders lose credibility. Employees feel cornered. HR becomes reactive instead of strategic.

This course resets the entire approach.

Performance Reviews for Employees Who Are Difficult People to Deal With teaches leaders how to write reviews that document reality, reflect real conversations, and hold standards without escalating conflict. It removes emotion, speculation, and personality judgments and replaces them with observable behavior, impact, and clear expectations.

Participants will learn why most performance review processes fail, especially with difficult personalities, and how mindset, timing, and language determine whether a review builds accountability or destroys trust. The course addresses how reviews are commonly misused as legal shields, pressure tactics, or ranking tools, and why those approaches backfire.

Leaders will be guided through the full lifecycle of an effective performance review. From the discussions that must happen before anything is written, to the language that works inside the document itself, to how reviews should connect to future action without becoming threats or ultimatums.

This training also protects employees. It teaches leaders how to avoid weaponized documentation, surprise feedback, and power-based reviews that leave people feeling trapped or silenced. Reviews become a record of leadership, not a reaction to frustration.

By the end of the session, leaders will understand how to write performance reviews that difficult employees may challenge emotionally, but cannot reasonably dispute. The result is clarity, consistency, and credibility across the organization.

Why you should Attend:

If performance reviews feel tense, ineffective, or pointless, you are not alone.

Most leaders dread writing reviews for difficult employees because they know what usually happens. The employee gets defensive. The conversation derails. The document gets challenged. HR gets pulled in. Trust erodes. Nothing actually improves.

Over time, leaders start avoiding feedback altogether. They delay conversations. They soften language. They hope behavior improves on its own. Then suddenly the review is due, and everything that was never said now has to be written down.

That is where fear sets in.

Am I saying this the right way?

Will this come back to haunt me?

Am I being too harsh or not clear enough?

With difficult employees, the stakes feel even higher. These individuals push back, debate language, question intent, and look for inconsistencies. One poorly written sentence can undo months of progress or escalate conflict overnight.

The result is a cycle of frustration. Leaders lose confidence. Employees lose trust. Performance stalls.

This course exists to break that cycle.

You will learn how to write performance reviews that are clear, calm, defensible, and grounded in real conversations. Reviews that difficult employees may not like, but cannot credibly dispute. Reviews that protect the organization without turning documentation into a weapon. Reviews that actually support improvement instead of triggering drama.

If you are tired of guessing, tired of walking on eggshells, and tired of reviews that create more problems than they solve, this course will give you the structure, language, and confidence you have been missing.

Areas Covered in the Session:

  • Why performance reviews fail with difficult employees
  • The leadership mindset required before writing a review
  • The role of real-time feedback and discussion
  • How to separate behavior from personality
  • Writing observable, defensible performance language
  • Documenting patterns without escalating emotion
  • How to state expectations without debate
  • How to acknowledge improvement honestly
  • When reviews support development and when they should trigger decisions
  • How to protect both the organization and the employee

Who Will Benefit:

  • Team Leads
  • Frontline Supervisors
  • People Managers
  • Mid-Level Managers
  • Department Heads
  • Directors of Operations
  • HR Managers and Business Partners
  • Learning & Development Leaders
  • Talent Development Professionals
  • Training Managers
  • Small Business Owners
  • Division Managers
  • General Managers
  • Assistant Managers
  • Area Supervisors
  • Store Managers
  • Project Managers
  • Shift Supervisors
  • Regional Leaders
  • Corporate Trainers
  • Employee Experience Managers
  • Culture and Engagement Leaders

Speaker Profile

Brenda Neckvatal is a three-time bestselling author, an award-winning Human Results professional, and a serial entrepreneur who has been featured in publications such as Forbes, Entrepreneur, Fast Company, Inc., and US News and World Reports. Perseverance, integrity, and relentless optimism are just a few of the ingredients you experience when meeting and working with Brenda.

Not only does she help business leaders tackle their toughest people challenges, but she is also a recognized expert in crisis management and group dynamics. As a trusted mentor to leaders and managers at all levels, she equips them with the skills to navigate complex interpersonal issues, resolve conflicts, and lead with confidence. By mastering these skills, they can lead their teams into tomorrow’s rapidly evolving business landscape with resilience, clarity, and purpose.

She really enjoys helping people solve their unique problems, and human resources offered her the ability to support her co-workers in a greater capacity. Having the benefit of working for a total of six Fortune 500 companies, she converted her experience into advising her audience to use tried and trusted best practices that help leaders achieve their workforce goals.

In her 30-year career in human resources and business, she has consulted to over 700 small businesses and 1,000 leaders. She has optimized employee effectiveness and helped leaders develop high-performing teams and navigate intense employment-related decisions.

Brenda is a devoted volunteer in the Navy SEAL Community and is constantly finding new ways of supporting veterans of Naval Special Warfare. She dedicates 32 weeks a year to working with The Honor Foundation to support the career transition of Special Forces personnel by providing them with her knowledge, insight, and creativity.