Most managers finish mid-year reviews knowing exactly what their team delivered. Very few walk out knowing what their team can actually do.
That disconnect isn’t a lack of effort. It’s a design limitation. Standard mid-year reviews measure past output rather than mapping future capability. They record what was done. They don’t evaluate skills you can see, measure, or trust.
This shows up as a well-documented perception gap between what leaders believe about their team’s skills and the reality on the ground. TalentLMS’s 2026 L&D research shows 83% of HR leaders think they actively support skills development. Only 64% of employees actually agree.
At the same time, 86% of employees build skills just by figuring things out on the job. This kind of everyday problem-solving is a form of development that never shows up in a formal HR document.
The result? A growing skills visibility gap. Managers are expected to drive performance to the year-end without a clear view of what their teams can actually do.
TL;DR
- Performance reviews today:
Measure what got done, not what people can actually do. - The problem:
Skills stay hidden, gaps go unnoticed, and managers lack clear visibility into team capability. - Why it happens:
Reviews are built around goals and competencies not skills. - The fix:
Add three questions to your next review to surface real capability.- Question 1:
What can this person do now that they couldn’t do six months ago? - Question 2:
Where do they still rely on workarounds, support, or guesswork? - Question 3:
What does the team need to be able to do next?
- Question 1:
- The result:
Clearer skills visibility, better decisions, and reviews that support growth—not just measure the past.
Why mid-year reviews matter but miss the mark
This isn’t just a mid-year issue. It’s how most performance reviews are designed. The mid-year checkpoint just makes it more visible.
With six months left to deliver, the stakes are higher. The mid-year review is a missed opportunity halfway through the year. Not just to reflect, but to understand what teams can do in the next 6 months to deliver on what’s ahead.
What mid-year reviews are actually built to measure
The problem is most mid-year reviews are built around goals and competencies:
- Goals track whether someone hit a specific target.
- Competencies track whether someone behaves a certain way at work, which usually just results in standard employee evaluation comments.
Neither of those metrics answers the most important questions:
- What new skills did the person build?
- Where are they stronger than they were six months ago?
- Where are their weak spots?
What goes unseen during mid-year reviews
Mid-year reviews miss the skills layer. When this happens, companies create a skills blind spot. Our 2026 benchmark data shows 44% of companies hire externally simply because they can’t see their own internal capabilities.
The frustrating part is that managers and employees are already talking to each other. When we asked them, most employees (66%) said they’d had a career-growth conversation with their manager recently. The conversations are already happening, but they fail to capture capability data.
The performance management and review process works for what it was built to do. It just wasn’t built to capture skills. As part of our Talent Talks podcast, industry analyst and influential L&D thinker David Kelly makes a great point about exactly why the flaw exists.
“Managers” and “leaders” aren’t the same, David Kelly points out. Performance reviews have always been a management tool used to measure output. Add a skills layer, and they become a leadership tool for growth.
The fix (3 questions to add to the review)
As David Kelly notes in the podcast, the best solutions get closer to the work. The fix doesn’t demand brand-new HR software deployment. The most effective approach embeds skills thinking into a conversation that’s already in the calendar.
Adding three specific questions to the next review cycle unlocks a different layer of visible, measurable skills data from previously invisible development.
1. What can this person do now that they couldn’t do six months ago?
This question captures that invisible skill development. The focus moves past what the employee delivered and straight into what they learned to do. All the informal learning from everyday problem-solving finally comes to the surface. This is where skills you can trust start to emerge.
2. Where does this person still rely on workarounds, other people, or guesswork?
Finding out where an employee encounters friction or fragility in the day-to-day reveals performance gaps you can actually work from. The goal isn’t to judge the employee. The goal is to build a map of exactly where they need development next. And then to put that map into action.
Managers often have no idea these hidden dependencies exist until a critical project breaks down. Getting those gaps on the table prevents future bottlenecks.
3. What does the team need to be able to do in the next 6 months that it can’t do today?
The final question shifts the lens from individual performance to team capability planning. The conversation connects the review directly to business needs instead of just personal career goals. Asking about the requirements for H2, turns a standard check-in into a powerful workforce planning tool.
Tips for managers
- Frame the conversation around growth
Make it clear that finding a missing skill is a positive developmental outcome, not a performance penalty. If employees think admitting to workarounds is a trap, they’ll hide their gaps. - Turn answers into actions
Synthesize talking points into a transparent view of team capability. This builds trust and purpose. It also means that instead of guessing who can handle what, there’s clear visibility into where support is needed next.
What this looks like in practice
Let’s look at how those three questions play out in a real conversation.
Imagine you’re sitting down with a marketing team lead. Their standard review notes show that they hit all their campaign targets. That’s great news, but it’s also where the conversation usually stops.
Now, ask Question 1.
You discover that they actually taught themselves how to use a brand new marketing automation platform to hit those targets. Suddenly, that skill is completely visible. You can log it, help them develop it further, and tap into it for upcoming projects.
Next, ask Question 2.
You find out they’re still building weekly reports by hand because they don’t know how to use your company’s analytics tool yet. That gap is now visible. You can address it with targeted training instead of waiting for a missed deadline.
Finally, ask Question 3.
You realize the marketing team needs video production skills for the next six months, and nobody currently has them.
That upcoming need is now visible. You can start planning for it right now through hiring, training investments, or internal mobility. Before it turns into a crisis.
One single conversation creates three layers of data that simply didn’t exist before. That’s the shift: from scattered signals to skills clarity you can act on.
Turn skills into your most powerful asset.
See exactly which capabilities your team has, who’s ready for promotion, and what training closes skills gaps with TalentLMS.
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From insight to action
Real companies are already using capability data to make better business decisions.
- SalesRoads used TalentLMS to track how much personal support employees needed to boost online learning, reducing live training as capability grew.
- Global Shop Solutions took a similar approach to team-level gaps. They segmented their training across internal and external teams based on specific capabilities. Seeing the exact needs of different groups meant they could build tailored training that actually sticks, rather than pushing a one-size-fits-all program.
Connecting capability data to existing tools makes the process seamless. Teams using TalentLMS can capture the answers from these conversations directly on an employee profile using the Skills feature:
- Answers from question one turn into verified skills logged at a specific proficiency level.
- Answers from question two become development priorities tied to targeted learning paths.
- Answers from question three reveal team-level capability gaps that shape your next quarter’s training plan.
The platform then takes the manual work out of fixing those gaps. When a manager logs a missing capability on an employee’s profile, the system matches it to an inbuilt library of courses tagged with that specific skill.
TalentLibrary™ — Skills that matter, courses that deliver.
With TalentLibrary™, you set the foundation for a strong, aligned workforce—soft skills, compliance, and workplace essentials, from day one (and beyond).
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The result? The mid-year review becomes an intake process for real growth instead of just another HR checkbox.
Complete the review
The mid-year review already has everyone’s attention. Managers and employees are sitting in the room together, reflecting on the past six months.
The only question left is whether you use that exact moment to look backwards or forwards.
Adding a skills layer doesn’t replace your standard performance review. The extra layer completes it. You don’t need to overhaul your entire HR process to start seeing the benefits. You just need to ask three new questions at your very next check-in. These elevate it from “How did you perform?” to “What can your team actually do next?”
Ready to put this into practice? Start with a standard employee performance review template, then add these three questions to capture the skills data most reviews miss. Or explore how to build a performance evaluation system from the ground up.
