Mid-Year Appraisal 2026: How Singapore Professionals Can Use This Moment to Accelerate Their Career

Most Singapore professionals treat the mid-year appraisal as something that happens to them. A box their manager needs to tick. A number to receive and quietly accept or quietly resent.
The professionals who move fastest treat it very differently. They treat it as one of two structured windows a year to actively shape what comes next — the projects they get, the salary they earn, the visibility they build and the trajectory they’re on. The mid-year review is not a verdict. It is a negotiation, if you prepare for it properly.
According to the Reeracoen Employee Sentiment Study 2025–2026, only 38% of Singapore professionals said they knew what specific improvements were expected of them after their last mid-year review. That means most people left the room without the clarity they needed to change direction — or to make the case for what they deserve.
This guide gives you a complete playbook: how to build your evidence, what to say in the room, how to ask for what you want, how to handle critical feedback — and what to do if the review does not go the way you hoped.
1. The Mindset Shift That Changes Everything
The difference between professionals who use the appraisal to accelerate and those who just survive it comes down to one thing: whether they show up as an active participant or a passive recipient.
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Passive Approach — Most Professionals |
Active Approach — Fast Movers |
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Wait for the manager to set the agenda |
Prepare your own agenda and share it 24 hours in advance |
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Respond to feedback as it comes |
Come with a self-assessment ready — your strengths and gaps, in your own words |
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Accept the rating and move on |
Ask: “What would a higher rating have looked like this period?” |
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Hope salary comes up |
Raise compensation directly, with market data to support it |
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Nod when development gaps are named |
Ask for a specific resource, project or mentor to address each gap |
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Leave without clear next steps |
Summarise the agreed actions before you leave the room |
2. Build Your Evidence File Before the Meeting
Your manager has a lot of people to review. They are working from memory, notes and their general impression of your year. Your job is to make their memory more accurate — and to ensure your best work is visible, not assumed.
Start your evidence file two weeks before the review. You need 3–5 strong examples, not a comprehensive list. Quality over quantity.
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Evidence Type |
Where to Find It |
How to Use It in the Review |
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Quantitative results |
KPI dashboards, sales figures, project delivery metrics, cost savings |
Lead with these. Numbers are the hardest evidence. Translate into business impact where possible: “This reduced onboarding time by 3 weeks per hire.” |
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Stakeholder feedback |
Emails of praise, project debrief notes, client feedback, peer thanks |
Screenshot or print key examples. Mention the source: “The regional VP noted in the April debrief that…” |
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Scope expansion |
Projects or responsibilities you took on beyond your job description |
Frame as evidence of readiness for the next level: “I’ve been effectively doing X, which sits in the role above mine.” |
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Problem-solving moments |
Issues you identified and resolved — especially ones your manager may not know about |
Choose one strong example and use the STAR format: Situation, Task, Action, Result. |
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Learning and development |
Courses completed, certifications earned, skills applied |
Show the application, not just the completion: “I applied the data analysis course to the Q1 pipeline review.” |
One practical tip: keep a running “win log” in a private note or document throughout the year. A short weekly entry of what you delivered, who noticed and what the impact was takes five minutes and saves hours of pre-review reconstruction.
3. Your Pre-Appraisal Checklist
Complete all seven items before you walk into the room:
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Your Pre-Appraisal Checklist — Complete Before the Meeting |
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☐ Evidence file ready 3–5 concrete achievements with business impact, supported by data or feedback |
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☐ Self-assessment written Your honest view of H1: what went well, what you would do differently, and one gap you’re working on |
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☐ Salary benchmark checked Compare your current pay to the Reeracoen Salary Guide 2025–2026 for your function and level |
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☐ Ask prepared One clear, specific request — salary, scope, development, or career clarity |
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☐ H2 goals drafted 2–3 goals you want to achieve in the second half of the year, in your own words |
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☐ Questions written At least two questions to ask your manager — not just to listen passively |
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☐ Tone calibrated Are you going in confident, anxious, frustrated? Name it to yourself before the meeting and adjust your opening accordingly |
4. What to Say in the Room
The conversation has six natural phases. Here’s where most professionals give ground — and where you can gain it.
Open strongly
When your manager asks how you feel the year is going, do not say “fine” or wait for them to set the frame. Say: “I’ve prepared a few highlights I’d like to walk through, if that works. Then I’d love your perspective.” This sets you up as someone who came prepared.
Lead with impact, not activity
Do not list what you did. Describe what changed as a result. “I managed the Q1 client onboarding” is activity. “The Q1 client onboarding I led resulted in a 3-week faster go-live and a follow-on contract worth SGD 180,000” is impact. One is forgettable. The other is not.
Ask the question most people skip
After your manager shares their assessment, ask: “What would a stronger performance have looked like this period?” This single question does three things: it shows maturity, it gives you the exact criteria for H2, and it often reveals expectations that were never communicated explicitly.
5. How to Ask for What You Want
Most Singapore professionals leave the review having received feedback but having asked for nothing. Here’s a practical guide to the six most common asks — and exactly how to raise them:
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What You Want |
How to Raise It |
What to Have Ready |
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A salary increase |
"I’d like to discuss my compensation. Based on the Reeracoen Salary Guide and conversations in the market, I believe my current salary is below the range for this role and level. I’d like to understand what would need to be true for an adjustment this cycle." |
Market benchmark data. Your evidence of performance. A specific number or range, not just a vague ask. |
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A promotion |
"I’ve been operating at the level above my current grade for the past two quarters — here are three examples. I’d like to understand what the promotion pathway looks like and what the timeline is." |
Documented examples of above-grade work. Understanding of what the next level requires. |
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A stretch project or new scope |
"I’m looking for more challenge in H2. Is there a project or initiative where I could take a more senior role or lead something end-to-end?" |
One or two specific projects you have in mind. Willingness to take it on alongside current responsibilities initially. |
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More development support |
"One of the gaps we’ve discussed is [X]. I’d like to address it with [specific course / mentorship / rotation]. Can we build that into my H2 plan?" |
A specific development option — not just a category. Show you’ve researched it. |
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Clarity on career path |
"I want to make sure I’m building towards something here. Can you help me understand what the 12–18 month trajectory looks like for someone in my role who performs well?" |
Nothing specific — this is about listening. But bring genuine openness to the answer, even if it surprises you. |
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Flexible work arrangement |
"I’d like to discuss my work arrangements for H2. I think [specific request] would allow me to do my best work while meeting team needs. Can we explore that?" |
A concrete proposal: specific days, hours or locations. Frame around productivity, not personal convenience. |
One rule: make one primary ask per review. If you raise salary, promotion, scope change and flexible work in the same conversation, none of them will land. Choose the most important one, make it clearly, and let the follow-up conversations handle the rest.
6. Know Your Market Value
The single most common mistake Singapore professionals make in salary negotiations is not having a number. “I’d like a raise” without a benchmark is easy to defer. “I’ve benchmarked my role at SGD X–Y based on the Reeracoen Salary Guide and I’m currently below that range” is a specific, professional ask that is much harder to ignore.
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Know Your Market Value Before You Walk In Singapore salary data from the Reeracoen Salary Guide 2025–2026:
If your current salary is more than 10% below these ranges, the mid-year review is your best opportunity to address it before the year-end cycle. Download the full Salary Guide here → |
7. How to Handle Critical Feedback
Critical feedback in a review is not an attack. It is information — either accurate information you should act on, or inaccurate information you need to address. Here’s how to handle each scenario in the room:
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How to Respond to Critical Feedback — In the Room |
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Your instinct is to defend |
Pause for 3 seconds. Say: “Thank you — can you give me a specific example?” You learn more from the example than from the general feedback, and asking shows maturity, not weakness. |
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You think the feedback is unfair |
Do not argue in the moment. Say: “I’d like to think about this properly. Can we revisit it in our next 1:1?” Then come back with your perspective and specific counter-evidence — not emotion. |
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The feedback surprises you |
Say: “I appreciate you raising this — I wasn’t aware this was the perception. What would improvement look like from your perspective?” This turns the surprise into a development conversation. |
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The feedback is vague |
Ask for specificity: “When you say [X], can you help me understand what that looked like in practice?” Vague feedback cannot be acted on. You are not being difficult by asking for clarity. |
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You agree with the feedback |
Say so directly: “You’re right, and I’ve been aware of this myself. Here’s what I’d like to do about it in H2.” Owning a gap and coming with a plan is the fastest way to change the perception. |
8. What to Do After the Review
How you behave in the 48 hours after the review often matters more than the conversation itself. Here are the four scenarios and what each one calls for:
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What Happened |
What It Means |
What to Do Next |
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Strong review, clear path forward |
Your manager sees you, your contributions are recognised and you have defined goals for H2. |
Execute. Deliver on the H2 goals with discipline. Revisit compensation at year-end if it wasn’t addressed now. Keep the evidence log going. |
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Good review but nothing concrete agreed |
Your manager is positive but the conversation didn’t produce outcomes. |
Follow up in writing within 48 hours: “Following our review, I’d like to confirm the H2 goals we discussed…” This creates accountability without confrontation. |
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Disappointing review — below your expectations |
There is a gap between how you see your performance and how your manager sees it. |
Ask for a follow-up meeting specifically on development: “I’d like to understand more clearly what strong performance looks like from your perspective.” Then decide: is this a fixable perception gap, or a signal about the role? |
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Unsatisfactory review and no support offered |
You received critical feedback with no development plan, no follow-up commitment and no pathway forward. |
Give it one structured attempt: request a specific plan in writing. If nothing changes in 4–6 weeks, this is a market signal, not just a review signal. A confidential conversation with a Reeracoen consultant costs nothing. |
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Should I send a self-assessment to my manager before the review?
A: Yes, if your company allows it — and even if it doesn’t, you should prepare one for yourself. Sharing a brief self-assessment 24 hours before the meeting signals professionalism and shifts the conversation from a one-way assessment to a genuine two-way discussion. Keep it to one page: H1 highlights, one honest gap, and your H2 priorities.
Q: How do I raise salary without it being awkward?
A: Timing and framing matter. Don’t raise it at the start or in the middle of the feedback conversation. Towards the end, when the tone is positive and future-focused, say: “I’d like to discuss my compensation. I’ve done some benchmarking against the market and I’d like to understand where I sit relative to the range for this role.” This is professional, not aggressive. Come with a specific number or range — vague requests are harder to action.
Q: What if my manager doesn’t have a clear answer about my promotion pathway?
A: Ask a follow-up: “Is it possible to schedule a separate conversation about this with HR or your manager?” If after two attempts you still have no pathway, that is useful information. A career conversation with a Reeracoen consultant can help you assess whether the opportunity you’re seeking exists inside your current company or requires a move.
Q: How do I prepare if I know I’ve had a below-average H1?
A: Come with honesty and a plan. Acknowledge what went wrong, briefly and without excessive apology. Then spend most of the conversation on what you will do differently in H2. Managers respond far better to a professional who owns a difficult period and has a recovery plan than one who is defensive or silent. Your credibility through a hard conversation often matters more than the hard conversation itself.
Q: Is the mid-year review a good time to mention I’m considering other opportunities?
A: Only if you are genuinely willing to leave and want to see if the company will respond. This is not a negotiation tactic — if your manager calls your bluff and you stay anyway, your credibility takes a serious hit. If you are genuinely exploring the market, you do not need to say so in the review. A confidential conversation with a Reeracoen consultant is the right first step.
Take Control of Your Career in H2 2026
Whether your mid-year review confirmed you’re on track or revealed that it’s time to explore what else is out there, Reeracoen’s Singapore consultants can help you make the most of this moment.
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Not sure if your career is on the right track? |
Find out what your role really pays in Singapore. |
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About the Author Valerie leads content and market insights for Reeracoen across Southeast Asia. She works closely with Reeracoen’s specialist recruitment consultants to translate hiring data, salary benchmarks and labour market trends into practical guidance for Singapore’s employers and professionals. Her work draws on Reeracoen’s proprietary research including the annual Salary Guide, Hiring Pulse, and Hiring Manager Survey.
Language note: This article is published in English. Reeracoen Singapore also publishes selected content in Japanese for our bilingual and Japanese-speaking professional community. |
References
- Reeracoen Employee Sentiment Study 2025–2026 — Career Clarity, Manager Feedback and Job Mobility Data
- Reeracoen Singapore Salary Guide 2025–2026 — Function and Seniority Benchmarks
- Reeracoen Hiring Manager Survey 2025–2026 — Performance Review Practices
- Ministry of Manpower Singapore — Wage Guidelines and Fair Employment Practices (2025)
- TAFEP — Tripartite Guidelines on Performance Management

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