Manager and employee reviewing documents together at a desk

Show Cause or Performance Management? How to Choose

July 13, 20264 min read

Show cause or performance management? Choosing the right process before you act

Most employers reach for the wrong one. And the wrong one is what turns a defensible exit into an unfair dismissal claim.

Show cause and performance management are not interchangeable. They solve different problems, they follow different processes, and using one when you needed the other is one of the most common procedural errors we see in small business.

Here is how to tell them apart, and how to pick the right one.

Performance Management is for Capability

Performance management addresses an employee who is not meeting the required standard of their role. The core issue is capability or output. They cannot do the job to the standard required, or they are not doing it.

It is a remedial process. The intent is to give the employee a genuine opportunity to improve. That means:

  • A clear statement of the standard expected and where performance is falling short

  • Specific, measurable improvement targets

  • A reasonable period to improve

  • Support, training or resources where relevant

  • Regular review and honest feedback

  • A documented warning process if improvement does not occur

Performance management assumes the employee might succeed. If they do not, and the process was fair, it can lead to termination. But improvement is the goal, not the exit.

Show Cause is for Conduct

Show cause is a different tool. It is used where there has been misconduct or serious misconduct, and you are asking the employee to explain why their employment should not be terminated.

It is not remedial. You are not helping them improve. You have identified conduct that may warrant dismissal, you have investigated it, and you are putting the allegations to the employee and giving them a genuine chance to respond before you make a decision.

A sound show cause process involves:

  • A completed investigation establishing the facts

  • Clear allegations put to the employee in writing

  • A genuine opportunity to respond, with enough time and information to do so

  • Consideration of that response before any decision is made

  • A proportionate outcome

How much time counts as enough is a judgement call, not a fixed number. It scales with the seriousness and volume of the allegations, and with how much material the employee has to work through before they respond. Give too little and the opportunity is not genuine, which is exactly where employers come unstuck.

The trigger is conduct, not capability. Theft, safety breaches, harassment, insubordination, dishonesty. Behaviour, not performance.

The difference at a glance

Performance management Show cause Trigger Capability or output below the required standard Misconduct or serious misconduct Intent Remedial, a real opportunity to improve A decision on whether to terminate Preceded by Feedback and identification of the gap An investigation into the conduct Employee is asked to Meet improvement targets over time Explain why they should not be dismissed Typical outcome Improvement, or escalation through warnings Dismissal, or a lesser outcome if the response is accepted Typical timeframe Weeks to months Days to a couple of weeks

The Mistake that Costs Employers

The most common error is using show cause to shortcut a performance problem.

An employee is underperforming. The employer is frustrated, wants them gone quickly, and issues a show cause letter demanding they explain why they should not be dismissed. There has been no performance process, no warnings, no opportunity to improve. The employee lodges an unfair dismissal claim, and the Commission finds the process procedurally unfair because performance was never properly managed. The reason for the exit may have been sound. The process was not.

The reverse also happens. An employer tries to performance manage genuine misconduct, running months of improvement plans and reviews for something that was a conduct issue from day one. That drags out the exposure, muddies the record, and often makes the eventual exit harder to defend.

How to Pick the Right One

Ask one question first. Is this a capability problem or a conduct problem?

If the employee is not meeting the standard and the issue is skill, output or consistency, that is performance management. Start there.

If the employee has done something, breached a policy, acted dishonestly, endangered someone, that is conduct. Investigate, then show cause.

Getting this decision right at the start shapes everything that follows. It determines your process, your documentation, your timeframes and your risk. It is far cheaper to choose correctly up front than to unwind a flawed process after a claim lands.

If you are not certain which one applies, that uncertainty is the signal to get advice before you act, not after.


Industrial HR provides practical, precise HR and industrial relations support for Australian businesses. For more information, visit industrialhr.com.au.

Rhiannon

Rhiannon

Industrial relations specialist with 20 years' experience in complex workplace matters, award compliance, and workplace investigations. Founder of Industrial HR.

LinkedIn logo icon
Instagram logo icon
Back to Blog