1 / 18

Performance Appraisal

Performance Appraisal. Performance Appraisal. Performance appraisal vs. performance management Why it doesn’t happen PA formats Problems with PA 360º feedback. Why Performance Appraisal ?. Why? Reward good performance Feedback to employees Employee development

anneliese
Télécharger la présentation

Performance Appraisal

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Performance Appraisal

  2. Performance Appraisal • Performance appraisal vs. performance management • Why it doesn’t happen • PA formats • Problems with PA • 360º feedback

  3. Why Performance Appraisal ? • Why? • Reward good performance • Feedback to employees • Employee development • Documentation for future managers, legal purposes

  4. What Makes Good Performance Appraisal? • PA should be based on job performance alone • PA also should be an ongoing process, not a once-a-year ritual • 6 characteristics of effective PA • Subordinate participation • Subordinate acceptance • Goal setting • Discussing problems with performance • Minimal criticism (defensiveness) • Subordinate voice

  5. Defining Performance • Objective vs. subjective • What can the individual control? • Job related vs. organization related behaviors • Dimensions to rate on

  6. Who Evaluates Performance? • Supervisor • Self • Subordinate • Peers • Customers

  7. Appraisal Formats • Trait ratings • Rankings • Outcome measures • Dimensional scales • BARS • MBO

  8. Trait Ratings • Traits (i.e., “industrious”) mean different things to different people • Lack of reliability • Not specific enough for useful feedback • What, specifically, does the employee need to do to be “industrious”? • Still used, though...... It’s quick and easy, and appealing to managers (“looks” good)

  9. Rankings and Forced Distribution • Currently popular • Managers required to rate a certain proportion of employees in each category • General Electric (“Rank-and-Yank”) • However…. • All employees may be equally good or bad, so forced distribution isn't the answer • May be comparing apples and oranges, if employees in different jobs • No anchor points (The employee on the bottom of the list may be satisfactory, but all of the others are simply better) • Not specific enough, in terms of areas and specific behavior, for useful feedback

  10. Outcome Measures • Nothing wrong with measuring outcomes..… • Need to chose correct outcomes • Focus on results not always helpful in showing employees what to do to get results • Outcomes may not be under employee’s control

  11. Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scales (BARS) • Format: • Scales for different areas or dimensions (usually 8-10 scales per job) • Each scale has 9 points or levels • At least three levels are anchored or defined with representative behaviors, describing superior, average, and below average levels of performance • The supervisor: • Responds to the question “This is the type of employee who would...” • Rates the employee from 9 (best) to 1 (worst), for each scale

  12. Management by Objectives (MBO) • About goals • Goals must be challenging, yet reachable • Must have meaningful employee participation • Three steps in process: • Employee and manager agree on goals • Progress toward goals monitored during appraisal period • At end of period, employee and supervisor meet again to determine if goals met

  13. Systematic Problems With Performance Appraisal • No performance appraisal or performance appraisal as a ritual only • Lack of top management support for performance appraisal or for meaningful appraisal • Appraisal should be (but too often isn’t) an ongoing process of feedback

  14. Problems in the Appraisal Interview • Disagreement (between employee and manager) • Defensiveness (when employee is given bad news in a non-constructive manner) • Manager’s unwillingness to confront problem employees • One-way communication (top-down only; employee has no opportunity to respond)

  15. Rater Errors (I) • Systematic errors/biases; normally, rater is unaware of these • Errors in rating process • Irrelevant information • Errors in observation • Stereotypes • Employee similar/not similar to rater • Pattern of performance (improve/decline) • Variability of performance

  16. Rater Errors (II) • Errors in storage and recall • Trait recall • Memory decay • Errors in actual evaluation • Political goals • Forced distribution/limited pot of money • Fear of confronting problem employees • Desire to look good

  17. The Seven Deadly Sins • Contrast Error • First and Last Impressions • Halo Effect • Stereotyping • “Similar-to-Me Effect” • Central Tendency Error • Negative and Positive Leniency

  18. 360º Appraisal • Also called “multisource feedback” • Gather information on performance from multiple sources • Supervisor • Peers • Subordinates • Self • Customers

More Related