There was a conversation in my BU by it's leader about the Team Space Check-Ins. It's a metric enforced on the leaders at every level, so if you don't do it, they get sh-t on by their manager. And you know that sh-t rolls down hill.
OP, why do you check the responses on a Saturday? That's your time off. Get some life/work balance.
I'm wondering if it's better not to check in on Fridays so I don't have to feel so disgusted every weekend because of my manager's negative comments.
During our BU's all-hands, the BU leader said that your response window runs through Thurs for it to count for the manager's metrics, but recommended that you check-in by Tue. So don't do it on Fri and wait until late on Mon.
We're SUPPOSED to check in every week, but I don't think not doing so would have any impact on anything.
It will have an impact on your manager's metrics, and s/he has to answer up to their manager as to why it's not getting done. You fu-k with their performance bonus, they fu-k with yours. It only takes a min or two to complete and keep your manager happy.
Are you guys doing "Check-in" on Fridays without fail?
Yes. By COB Monday.
If stopped, has your manager or HR contacted you and urged again?
Our BU leader called out every manager during the last all-hands to ensure that everyone does it "to make our metrics look good".
OP, what are you putting in your "check-in" that your manager responds to? Simply leave the "loves" and "loathes" sections empty, check that your manager has checked in with you (that's what's important to MY manager and we have a bi-weekly 1:1 so that covers that box), and list your priorities for the week. Then you mark off the completed tasks and add new ones next week. Easy peasy. Don't put anything in the last text field asking if there's anything you need from your manager as that will cause them to need to respond. Unless you do need something. But depending on your situation, it may be better to not document those discussions unless you need to cover your a-s, in which case your manager is probably covering their a-s too.
I recently had a conversation with my manager about Team Space and it's need. We have weekly team staff meetings where everyone goes around discussing what they're working on this week, the Team Space weekly check-in, bi-weekly 1:1 and our team uses a mix of ServiceNow stories and Asana "tasks" to track work. It's a ton of duplication and I wanted to know which of these was most important to him instead of wasting time on all of them.
His response was that the weekly team staff meeting was more for the team to know what the others were working on (why? I don't care what they're working on.). That Team Space was required by the BU for metrics, but he didn't really care about the tasks and rarely looked at them. ServiceNow stories were the "source of truth" of what we were doing, but that the BU had looked into Asana to see if it was a better fit when suddenly Jira was mandated "from on high" so we'll be migrating stories from ServiceNow to Jira and dropping the use of Asana. Some of us want to keep Asana & will probably use it at the free plan level because it's easier to use than Jira.