Title: Appraising Performance: Strategies and Lessons Learned
1Appraising Performance Strategies and Lessons
Learned
- Wendy K. Soo Hoo, Assistant City Auditor
- City of Seattle
- November 2004
2Agenda
- What the Experts Say About Performance Appraisals
- What Do You Think?
- Performance Appraisals Versus Performance
Management and Other New Practices - Conducting Effective Meetings About Performance
(and Other Difficult Conversations)
3- What the Experts Say About Performance Appraisals
4Performance Appraisal Definition
- A PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL IS
- One of those special human encounters where the
manager gets no sleep the night before, and the
employee gets no sleep the night after. - Thomas B. Wilson
5Overarching Goal
- To create and promote a workforce that can
achieve the organizations mission to provide the
most value to its stakeholders
6Elements of Traditional Appraisals
- Goal SettingSupervisors set performance
objectives or standards for individual employees - MeasuresTasks or levels of performance are used
to gauge whether person has achieved his/her
goals - FeedbackComparison of performance to goals is
usually provided at end of performance period - Performance RatingSupervisor judges overall
performance and gives numeric rating - Merit PayPay increase based on performance
rating and market price for position.
7Performance Appraisals in Your Organization
- Are managers in your organization required to
conduct performance appraisals? - 1 Yes 2 No
- Do you give performance appraisals, do you
receive a performance appraisal, or both? - 1 Give Appraisal 2 Receive 3 Both
8Appraisal Process Objectives
- Managers Recognize and reward top performers.
- Employees Obtain honest, timely feedback,
development and coaching. - Compensation Managers Ensure that dollars
allocated according to performance. - Human Resource Executives Identify top
performers and plan for their development and
succession.
9Whats Wrong With This Picture?
- Managers are usually uncomfortable with appraisal
process. - Employees are not happy with the assessment of
their performance. - Most organizations (90) do not consider
performance appraisals to be effective.
10 Myths Reality
- Appraisal process can effectively serve several
functions - One-size-fits-all works well for supervisors and
employees - Ratings are motivating
- People withhold effort without incentives
- Often one function undercuts the other (e.g.,
employees focus on pay) - Different preferences in coaching, receiving
feedback - Ratings dont provide useful information and can
be demoralizing - People are intrinsically motivated to perform
well when work is meaningful
11Why Appraisal Processes Often Fail
- Appraisal process only operates for part of the
yearnot meaningful if goals are not monitored. - Ratings are based on managers opinions, only
include what managers remember. - Managers avoid honest feedback to prevent
conflict. - Organizations try to meet too many objectives
(feedback, development, pay raises, etc.). - Employees believe criteria are vague, subjective
can be demoralized by ratings, especially when
pay is involved
12Linking Pay to AppraisalsA Good Idea?
- At least two dozen studies over the last three
decades conclusively documented that people who
expect a reward for completing a task, or for
doing that task successfully, simply do not
perform as well as those who expect no reward at
all. - Harry Levinson
13Rewards or Punishment?
- Pay is not a motivator, but it can be a
de-motivator when it is inequitable - Rewards can create conflict between managers and
staff, or among staff members - Rewards undermine interest because artificial
incentive cannot match intrinsic motivation
14Merit Pay Increases and Performance Appraisals
- Should merit pay increases be included in the
performance appraisal process? - If the purpose is to provide feedback, encourage
development, probably not. - If the purpose is to reward the individualmaybe.
- Merit pay increase should be given when
individual shows new capabilities over a
sustained period, rather than end-of-the-year
appraisal.
15Remember Myers-Briggs
- Anyone who supervises someone else should
- Look carefully at the assumptions made about
motivation. - Assess the degree to which carrot-and-stick
assumptions influence own attitudes. - Harry Levinson
16What Do You Think?
- On a scale of 1 to 5, what do you think of the
performance appraisal process? - 1 Performance appraisals always meet these
objectives. - 2 They meet some of these objectives.
- 3 They are a necessary evil.
- 4 They could/should be improved if we
continue to use them. - 5 Performance appraisals should be eliminated
altogether. -
17What Do You Think?
- Do appraisals encourage you to work harder?
- 1 Yes, I work harder because of the
appraisals. - 2 Yes at least for the the month before or
after my appraisal. - 3 No, my effort would have been the same with
or without an appraisal. - 4 No, I find performance appraisals
discouraging and ineffective, which impacts my
work effort.
18So What Do We Do Instead?Performance Management
and Other New Practices
19Typical Process Ideal Process
- Highly subjective
- Unilateral (only from the managers perspective)
- Little focus on future capacity
- Uncertain link to business success drivers
- Explicitly defined
- Mutually understood, with multilateral
communication - Strong development focus
- Grounded in business success drivers
20SMART
- SpecificGoals and criteria should be clearly
defined - MeaningfulEvaluation process should impact
behavior - AchievableGoals should be realistic process
should provide incentive to perform beyond
expectations - ReliableProcess should achieve
desired objectives - TimelyPerformance reviews and feedback should
occur more frequently than once each year.
21Performance Management
- Performance management is the process of creating
a work environment in which people are enabled to
perform to best of their abilities. - Begins when a job is defined and ends when the
employee leaves your organization.
22Performance Managementat the Organization Level
- Clearly define and communicate the organizations
mission, strategies, and performance goals. - Provide appropriate training for managers on
giving feedback. - Ensure employees receive ongoing feedback and
appropriate training. - Align job descriptions with organizational
goals. - Conduct exit interviews to understand why valued
employees leave the organization.
23Performance Managementat the Manager Level
- Involve employees in goal-setting process goals
should be flexible enough to reflect changing
workplace conditions. - Clearly articulate performance metrics used to
measure employees success in meeting agreed-upon
goals. - Provide training to employees to strengthen
performance and advance career. - Provide ongoing on the job feedback.
24Performance Managementat the Employee Level
- Develop performance goals with his/her manager.
- View manager as a coach or mentor rather than
someone who passes judgment. - Be receptive to feedback.
- Dont rely on manager to provide all the
feedbackemployee is also responsible for
providing information on his/her performance.
25Other New Approaches
- Evaluations in new systems are not conducted for
raises, promotions, or bonusesinstead for
development and communication. - Most important aspect in all is multilateral
communication between employee, managers, and
others, rather than one-way communication.
26Examples
- Pass/fail systems or no ratings at all
- Peer reviews
- Self-reviews
- Upward assessments
- 360-degree feedback
27Owning the Solution
- If people do not participate in and own the
solution to the problems or agree to the
decision, implementation will be halfhearted at
best, probably misunderstood, and more likely
than not fail. - Michael Doyle in forward to Kaner, Sam
Facilitators Guide to Participatory Decision
Making New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island,
BC 1996
28Recapping the Key Points
- Expectations should be linked to business
objectives - Performance goals should be established
- People should be coached, mentoredemployees
should be motivated and - Assessments relying solely on supervisors
perspective will have limited value.
29Are You Using Any New Techniques?
- 1 Yes, and its more effective than the
traditional appraisal process. - 2 Yes, were still evaluating the
effectiveness. - 3 Not yet, but were thinking about it
- 4 No, well probably always use the traditional
appraisal process.
30Dealing With Difficult Conversations
31Four Stages of Difficult Conversations
- Prepare
- Initiate conversation
- Explore their story, then yours
- Collaborate on resolution
32Stage 1 Prepare
- Consider your objectives and approach
- Conduct researchif youre the manager, review
the employees file, outline some topics and
talking points, do a mental walk-through. - Employee should consider their performance as
well and prepare notes or jot down concerns and
questions. - Be open to multiple perspectives
- Adopt a positive mindset (see next slide)
33Choose a Positive Context
- When a conflict is framed in a negative context,
the focus is on power, and will likely result in
a winner and a loser. - Focusing on improvements instead of mistakes can
defuse the tension.
34Stage 2 Initiate Conversation
- Invite conversation and share your purpose
- Key practice describe the issue/problem as a
difference in perspective - Avoid problem solving during initial stage of
conversation - Acknowledge feelings, which are frequently core
issues, before attempting to solve stated problems
35Stage 3 Get Their Story-- Then Tell Them Yours
- Start with their story
- Dont assume that you know their story
- Dont push backListening does not imply
agreement - Express your views and feelings after their story
is finished
36Your Story
- Start with the most important points
- State what you mean clearly to avoid assumptions
- Share how you formed conclusions
- Avoid words like never or always or fault
- Present your story as your truth not the truth
37Stage 4 Collaborate on Resolution
- Invite the other person to help identify
solutions - Invite the other person to come back if attempted
resolution is not successful - Remain hopeful that mutually acceptable solution
is possible - Recap major points, be sure to end on encouraging
note
38Key Sources
- Wilson, Thomas B. Innovative Reward Systems For
the Changing Workplace, McGraw-Hill, New York
1994. - Flannery, Thomas P., et. al., People,
Performance, and Pay, The Free Press, New York
1996. - Various articles published on human resource
websites