Keeping a performance review cycle on schedule is harder than it should be, and the teams running those cycles know it better than anyone. At Flo, we move fast because we stay close to the problems our clients are actually dealing with day to day. Automated review stage reminders are the latest example of that, and we think it's one of those features that immediately makes you wonder how you got by without it. Flo is the fastest shipping company in the legal talent industry, and this one was built straight from what we kept hearing from Professional Development and HR teams.
Performance review stages have deadlines. In practice, those deadlines often slip. Reviewees forget a self-assessment is due. Reviewers lose track of when their window closes. Cycles drag past their intended end dates, and the people responsible for running them end up filling the gap with manual reminder emails sent one by one.
That manual overhead compounds fast. When you are managing a firm-wide review cycle across multiple stages, tracking who has and has not completed their portion, and deciding who needs a nudge and when, it becomes a significant administrative burden on top of everything else talent and HR teams are already handling. And even with that effort, reminders still go out inconsistently, or not at all.
What we kept hearing was simple: there should be a way to set the reminders once and have the system handle it. So that is what we built.
Perform administrators can now configure automatic reminder emails that go out on a defined schedule before each review stage deadline. The setup is per stage, so you have precise control over which stages send reminders and what those reminders say.
Here is what the configuration looks like in practice:
The immediate payoff is time saved. Professional Development and HR teams no longer need to monitor stage completion and manually draft follow-up emails during an active cycle. The reminders go out automatically, on schedule, to the right people.
Beyond the admin burden, there is a real impact on cycle completion. Reviewees and reviewers who get a timely, specific reminder, one that names the stage, the cycle, and when it closes, are more likely to act before the deadline. That means fewer extended cycles, cleaner close dates, and less back-and-forth chasing stragglers after a stage was supposed to wrap up.
The personalization matters too. A reminder that opens with a reviewer's name, references the exact stage they need to complete, and tells them the specific closing time in their timezone reads like a deliberate communication, not a mass blast. That signal alone tends to drive better response rates than a generic "your review is due soon" message.
For organizations running multiple concurrent review cycles, the duplicate suppression feature is especially valuable. It keeps inboxes clean and makes sure a single person does not receive a flurry of near-identical reminder emails just because two stages happen to share a deadline.
This feature gets better the more you fine-tune it to your firm's rhythm. Try different reminder windows, adjust the message tone for different stage types, and see what drives the completion rates you are looking for. If something is still slowing down your cycles, keep telling us, because that is exactly how this kind of work gets prioritized.
If you want to see how automated reminders fit into a full performance cycle workflow, you can book a demo and we will walk through it with you.